A long-awaited plan to build a Disney theme park in Shanghai appears to have moved forward, with officials confirming that central government approvals are in place and an announcement is due soon.
However, Disney said that there were no changes to report.
Mayor Han Zheng (韓正) told reporters on Sunday that the city plans to make an announcement as early as this week to explain details of the plan — handy timing ahead of President Barack Obama’s planned visit to Shanghai on Nov. 15.
An official in the public information department of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), China’s main planning agency, confirmed yesterday that the plan had been approved.
The official, who like many Chinese officials refused to give his name, referred inquiries to the local NDRC branch. That office did not immediately respond to requests for information submitted by phone and fax.
Two other officials, who also spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to media, confirmed that the NDRC had approved the plan. But they also would not give any details.
A Disney executive confirmed discussions were still under way and that the company and the Shanghai government had submitted a request for central government approval, which would be required for any major project.
“No deal has been agreed to, no project has been approved,” Leslie Goodman, an executive vice president for Disney Parks and Resorts Group, said in a statement.
The difference in public stances could reflect last-minute quibbling over details for the project, such as the share of costs or ownership to be taken by Disney.
Speaking after weekend meetings with international business advisers, Han said that the city would hold a news conference this week.
Last spring, Han said on the sidelines of the national legislative session that the two sides were getting down to serious negotiations.
But he compared Disney and Shanghai to “lovers, still in love but having a hard time deciding when to get married,” the Shanghai newspaper Oriental Morning Post quoted him as saying.
Disney chief executive Bob Iger said earlier this year that the company was waiting for word from the central government about building the theme park.
Residents were long ago moved off farmland in Chuansha, a part of Pudong district near the city’s main international airport, to make way for the theme park.
Shanghai’s leaders are keen to develop this former bastion of Chinese industry into a global services and financial center, and building a Disney park would create jobs and be a key draw for tourism.
Walt Disney Co earlier emphasized that it was focusing on developing its theme park in Hong Kong, which has seen disappointing attendance since opening in 2005.
Shanghai itself is in the midst of a massive construction boom ahead of next year’s World Expo, which will run from May 1 to Oct. 31 downtown along the city’s Huangpu river.
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