Shanghai has set its 2007
GDP growth target at above nine percent, the lowest target in 15
years, to aim for more balanced and sustainable economic and social
development, Mayor Han Zheng said on Sunday.
"We have to turn from the traditional,
quantity-centered mode of economic growth to a more rational,
balanced and resource-efficient means of development," Han said in
his work report to the municipal lawmakers' session.
The city needed to reduce energy consumption and
safeguard the environment in its economic development and seek a
balance between consumption, investment and export and between man
and nature, he said.
"Shanghai cannot afford to seek economic development
at the cost of its resources and environment," Han told
Xinhua.
The city's spending on environment protection this
year will be around three percent of its GDP, a goal spelt out in
the government work report.
Meanwhile, Shanghai will slash energy consumption for
every 10,000 yuan (US$1,282) of GDP by four percent from the 2006
level and cut emissions by two percent.
Following the central government's policy of building
a "harmonious society", Shanghai authorities have vowed to keep the
urban unemployment rate within 4.5 percent and consumer price rises
below three percent.
Shanghai's economy has
maintained two-digit growth for 15 years running. Last year, its
GDP totaled 1.03 trillion yuan (US$132 billion), up 12 percent from
2005. Its energy consumption per 10,000 yuan of GDP was reduced by
four percent, according to the municipal bureau of
statistics.
(Xinhua News Agency January 29, 2007)
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