Linfen aims to be a natl transformation model

Linfen, a resource-dependent city in China’s Shanxi province, is undergoing a remarkable economic transformation by strategically cultivating new quality productive forces. During the ongoing Two Sessions, Li Yunfeng, Party Secretary of Linfen and NPC deputy, revealed the city’s comprehensive development strategy focusing on three emerging economic sectors: digital economy, low-altitude economy, and micro-short drama economy.

The digital economy has demonstrated explosive growth, reaching 18.25 billion yuan ($2.65 billion) in revenue during 2025—a staggering 62.8% year-on-year increase that ranks first provincially. The low-altitude economy has established substantial infrastructure including Class A service stations and eight major flight bases, with 23 supporting enterprises conducting over 3,000 service scenarios. Meanwhile, the micro-short drama industry has attracted 87 film production companies that produced 273 short dramas, with ambitious targets to attract 50 leading enterprises and produce over 500 micro-short dramas in 2026.

This transformation represents a fundamental shift for a city that historically faced dual challenges of resource dependency and ecological pressure. Over the past decade, Linfen has consistently prioritized environmental protection, shutting down 9.15 million metric tons of coking capacity and 220,000 tons of crude steel capacity since the 14th Five-Year Plan period. The city has completed ultra-low emission transformations across its industrial base and achieved remarkable air quality improvements, with PM2.5 density dropping to 35.1 micrograms per cubic meter in 2025.

Linfen’s cultural heritage has gained renewed attention following the global success of the video game ‘Black Myth: Wukong,’ which features scenes inspired by the region’s ancient Buddhist and Taoist culture. The city has launched innovative tourism initiatives including free shuttle buses and parking under its ‘Homecoming’ service brand, while planning deeper cultural-tourism integration through sports events, performances, and food directories.

Looking toward the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026-30), Linfen aims to establish itself as a national model for urban transformation and comprehensive reform. The city is committed to energy transition, industrial upgrading, and developing a new energy system while promoting low-carbon development in traditional industries. By 2030, Linfen targets the fundamental achievement of resource-based economic transformation and positioning as an ecological protection demonstration city in the Yellow River Basin.