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          generally enjoyed an excellent facilitative
        
        
          relationship with PFL, but the port has
        
        
          also become a key part of our community
        
        
          on numerous fronts over the years.
        
        
          PFL is responsible—either directly or
        
        
          through associated logistics and support
        
        
          businesses—for more than the equivalent
        
        
          of one in 10 jobs in the county of Suffolk.
        
        
          As such, our town has enjoyed near full
        
        
          employment and significant economic
        
        
          growth over the years. It is for this reason
        
        
          that the port is greatly valued and held in
        
        
          such high esteem in the town.”
        
        
          Where Felixstowe’s development
        
        
          has propelled the growth of the local
        
        
          town, halfway around the world, port
        
        
          development in a rural seaside county in
        
        
          Mainland China spurred the transformation
        
        
          of an entire region.
        
        
          Yantian: Transforming
        
        
          the Pearl River Delta
        
        
          It’s hard to imagine that in 1979, Shenzhen
        
        
          was home to just rice paddies and some
        
        
          fisherfolk. The transformation began when
        
        
          former leader Deng Xiaoping implemented
        
        
          a policy of economic reform for China,
        
        
          and Shenzhen was designated as the
        
        
          nation’s first Special Economic Zone. The
        
        
          area was developed as an experiment in
        
        
          urbanisation and industrialisation, opening
        
        
          China to the world. This programme
        
        
          transformed the region and millions of
        
        
          peoples’ lives.
        
        
          Over the course of 30 years, Shenzhen
        
        
          grew from a rural county of about 30,000
        
        
          people into a modern city of 15 million, as
        
        
          people flocked from all over China to be
        
        
          part of the vanguard of a nation’s opening.
        
        
          From 1980 to 2011, the city’s annual GDP
        
        
          growth averaged a staggering 25 per cent.
        
        
          Up to 2013, Shenzhen claimed the highest
        
        
          export volume in China for 21 consecutive
        
        
          years. Along with Shenzhen’s economic
        
        
          development came extensive growth of the
        
        
          city’s physical and human infrastructure.
        
        
          Shenzhen’s port, China’s window
        
        
          But to create this modern trading centre
        
        
          and open China’s economy, the nascent
        
        
          city would need a port—and a port
        
        
          operator. If Shenzhen was to be China’s
        
        
          catalyst for change, the port would be its
        
        
          window to the world. The Chinese and
        
        
          new Shenzhen government recognised the
        
        
          importance of getting this right.
        
        
          In 1993, with the endorsement of the
        
        
          Shenzhen government, HWL and Shenzhen
        
        
          Dongpeng Industry Company Limited
        
        
          (now Shenzhen Yantian Port Group) signed
        
        
          a joint-venture agreement to establish
        
        
          Yantian International Container Terminals
        
        
          (YICT). The terminal became the first
        
        
          foreign-held joint-venture port in Mainland
        
        
          China.
        
        
          From humble beginnings
        
        
          toworld leader
        
        
          Before the port was built, the area now
        
        
          known as Yantian District was just a sub-
        
        
          district within the Luohu District. When
        
        
          the port became operational in 1994, the
        
        
          local government saw and acted on the
        
        
          need to facilitate transport and exchange
        
        
          by building freeways, rail and other key
        
        
          supporting infrastructure. In 1997, the
        
        
          State Council officially declared the area its
        
        
          own district, meaning it could undertake
        
        
          independent policies that catered to its
        
        
          new residents. Soon, schools and hospitals
        
        
          were built in the district to accommodate
        
        
          incoming talent.
        
        
          YICT handled a mere 13,000 twenty-
        
        
          foot equivalent units (TEUs) in its first
        
        
          year. Growth quickly escalated as HPH
        
        
          leveraged its strategic position next to
        
        
          Hong Kong. Ships could connect to the
        
        
          trans-shipment hub of Hong Kong,
        
        
          where additional HPH expertise was
        
        
          readily at hand.
        
        
          Port logistics became one of the pillars of
        
        
          Yantian’s economy and related industries
        
        
          created a total of 143,000 jobs. The jobs
        
        
          demanded an educated workforce, so the
        
        
          Yantian District and surrounding Shenzhen
        
        
          became the home of high-quality local and
        
        
          international schools accepting students
        
        
          from all over the country. To this day, the
        
        
          Shenzhen Foreign Languages School in
        
        
          Yantian is one of the top secondary schools
        
        
          in China.
        
        
          Mr Li Yinjun, the principal of a local
        
        
          primary school, has been in Yantian since
        
        
          1991. Mr Li emphasised that the port put
        
        
          Yantian on the map. “Without the port,” he
        
        
          said, “Yantian would not be an independent
        
        
          district. And it would have been less likely
        
        
          for people abroad and in China to know
        
        
          that it even existed.”
        
        
          The development of the regional economy
        
        
          meant that millions were able to leave
        
        
          
            “The port has become a key
          
        
        
          
            part of our community.”
          
        
        
          Councillor Graham Newman,
        
        
          Mayor of Felixstowe