China's infrastructure construction gathers pace as epidemic wanes

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Infrastructure construction has gathered pace across China as the government ramped up funding to spur investment in the sector following basic containment of the novel coronavirus outbreak.

XinhuaUpdated: April 14, 2020

Infrastructure construction has gathered pace across China as the government ramped up funding to spur investment in the sector following basic containment of the novel coronavirus outbreak.

Workers work at the construction site of Metro Line 5 in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province, March 31, 2020. [Photo/Xinhua]

Data from China Construction Machinery Association showed excavator producers reported record sales in March as production resumption accelerated nationwide.

Total excavator sales, an important indicator of the vitality of an economy as demand is usually backed by growth in mining and infrastructure development, hit a record high of 49,408 last month, up 11.6 percent year on year.

The industry data, which suggest a rebound in activities, was in line with the excavator index tracked by leading construction gear maker Sany Heavy Industry Co., Ltd. that showed infrastructure construction had recovered to the average level seen in 2019 since March 20.

In another sign of recovery, production and prices of construction materials, including cement and steel, saw visible climbs. Data from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology showed work resumption rate of the cement industry reached 94 percent as of April 6.

Transactions on the steel market became more active, with daily transactions reaching 238,000 tonnes in early April from 127,000 tonnes seen in early March, data from industry information provider mysteel.com showed.

"Demand in the construction industry has basically recovered to last year's level driven by new and resumed projects," said Xu Xiangchun, an analyst with mysteel.com.

As China looks to quicken the issuance of local government bonds, which are mainly used on infrastructure, investment in the area is likely to see double-digit growth this year.

Earlier data showed China's local government bond issuance reached a record high in the first quarter as authorities allocated additional quotas for new sales as part of the more proactive fiscal policies to shore up the virus-hit economy.

The value of local government bonds issued in March totaled 387.5 billion yuan (about US$55 billion), bringing total local government bond issuance to more than 1.6 trillion yuan in the first quarter.