Its population was 2,781,562 as of the2020 census, of whom 1,574,389 lived in the built-up (or metro) area in four out of the total of five urban districts:Sartu,Longfeng,Ranghulu andHonggang.
The region now known as Daqing Prefecture was a reasonably insignificant place until theQing dynasty, known only as an unsettled hunting ground ofDörbet Oirat tribes due to its wetland and prairies. The region began to grow slightly after theRussian Empire constructed theChinese Eastern Railway (KVZhD) through the area in 1898.[4] The railway has a station at Sartu in today'sSartu District. It was not until 1959 that oil was discovered in the region as part of the large scale oil exploration put into motion across theNortheast China Plain.[3]
The Daqing oilfield was discovered in the late 1950s, and drilling began in 1958. A town with the same name was founded in 1959 to house workers extracting oil and gas from the oilfield and to host industries which could take advantage of the energy and petrochemicals, shortly before the 10th anniversary of the founding of the PRC. The oilfield and the town had the same administrative body until 1983.[5]: 52
The successful construction of the Daqing oil field despite harsh weather conditions and supply limitations became a model held up by the Party as an example during subsequent industrialization campaigns.[6]: 52–54 The project also delivered critical economic benefits because without the production of the Daqing oil field, crude oil would have been severely limited after the Soviet Union cut off supplies as a result of the Sino-Soviet split.[6]: 53
Original plans for Daqing included the development of a "new socialist mining district" (rather than a city) with families in which the husband would work in industry and the wife would work in agriculture.[7]: 313 Ultimately, the city expanded incrementally with clusters forming around developing refineries and oil wells.[5]: 52 All settlements used a single-story mud technique called scientific gandalei, with multistory brick buildings being introduced in the late 1960s.[5]: 53
The name Daqing literally means "Great Celebration".[5]: 52 On 26 May 1960, Anda City was established at former Anda town (today'sAnda City inSuihua prefecture), administering Daqing oilfield area. Five months later, the administrative organs of the oilfield relocated in Sartu. On 23 June 1964, the city was established Anda special administrative region, with Anda county administering its surrounding area.
The first two years of theCultural Revolution resulted in major disruptions toChina's petroleum industry and an oil shortage by 1967.[2]: 159 In March of that year, thePeople's Liberation Army was called to Daqing to maintain order so that oil production could proceed.[2]: 159 This made Daqing one of the first places brought under military control during the Cultural Revolution.[2]: 159 In May 1968, the DaqingRevolutionary Committee was established.[2]: 159 Iron ManWang Jinxi became its vice director.[2]: 159–160 The oil field continued to be a major driver of economic growth during the Cultural Revolution period.[2]: 160
In the mid-1970s, Daqing was administratively organised into three large towns (about 50,000 people each) along the major railway, 60 industrial-agricultural villages (about 10,000 people each), and 164 "residential points" around the villages.[5]: 53–54
The Daqing Oil District became a city in 1980.[2]: 200 Its first master plan set a goal of growing Daqing into "a new industrial city" through a development strategy of "relative dispersion with several modest concentrations.[2]: 200 Academic Hou Li summarizes that as a result "new settlements became much more concentrated. The three existing towns, thirty-four central villages, and 260 settlement points were restructured into six workers' towns, twenty-four central villages, and twenty-seven resident villages."[2]: 200
The city revised its master plan in 1989, setting a new goal of building an oil city centered in Saertu, Dongfeng, and Longfeng.[2]: 200 This plan shifted Daqing'surban planning focus away from decentralization to centralization.[2]: 200
In 1990, the city received the top recognition in the Heilongjiang Province Science and Technology Awards.[2]: 200 In 1994, its population reached one million.[2]: 200 After the mid-1990s, urban expansion in Saertu was halted in order to provide more space for oil production.[2]: 1 Urban construction was instead transferred to East Town and West Town areas.[2]: 1
Daqing has been advocated as a model of good practice in industry[5]: 52 and healthcare by the Chinese government.
The fact thatMao Zedong promulgated hisSupreme Directive,Learn from Daqing in Industry, in the 1960s reflects how important a role Daqing has historically played in industry in China.[8]Learn from Daqing in industry (Chinese:工业学大庆;pinyin:gōngyè xué dàqìng) was aslogan during theCultural Revolution telling the people to use the city as an example for industrial production.[8][9]
Daqing was promoted as a model communist industrial city.[5]: 54 Daqing's development had resulted in an integration of rural and urban and community self-sufficiency.[5]: 53 PremierZhou Enlai summarized its achievements with the phrase, "Integration of workers and peasants, integration of urban and rural areas, good for production, and convenient for livelihood."[5]: 55 Equality was achieved through distribution of resources, public land management, standardised housing, and communal work.[5]: 54 Men worked in the oil fields and received state salaries and pensions. Women and older children worked in agricultural production and supplied food for the community.[5]: 53 As mechanisation of agriculture increased over time, small factories were established.[5]: 53 Students participated in production, either through agriculture or work-studfy in factories.[5]: 53 Services like public canteens, medical clinics, nurseries, and schools were collectively run.[5]: 53
The filmEntrepreneurial Pioneers (创业), made in the early 1970s, is a literary rendition of the history of Daqing. During the Mao era, Daqing's agricultural counterpart wasDazhai, a village in the hillyXiyang county,Shanxi Province, for which Chairman Mao issued the directiveIn agriculture, learn from Dazhai, also in the 1960s.[10]
Located in the north temperate zone, Daqing has ahumid continental climate (KöppenDwa) and is affected by theSiberian high and theEast Asian monsoon. Generally, winter is bitterly cold with occasional snowfalls, and spring and autumn are prevailed by monsoons. The vast majority of the annual rainfall occurs during summer. Thediurnal temperature variation can be up to 14 °C (25 °F) during the growing period. The monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from −18.5 °C (−1.3 °F) in January to 23.3 °C (73.9 °F) in July, and the annual mean is +4.2 °C (39.6 °F). A majority of the annual precipitation falls in July and August alone. With monthly percent possible sunshine ranging from 53% in July to 70% in February, the city receives 2,726 hours of bright sunshine annually. Extreme temperature ranges from −39.2 °C (−38.6 °F) to 39.8 °C (103.6 °F)
Climate data for Daqing, elevation 147 m (482 ft), (1991–2020 normals)
Daqing has a population of 2.9 million, mainlyHan Chinese, with a small population of 31 minority ethnic groups, includingManchu,Mongolian,Korean, andHui nationalities. The population density is 112.69/km2, in urban[clarification needed] areas 205.07/km2.[13]
Well Sa-55 first drilled by Wang Jinxi and his colleaguesWildcat in Daqing
Daqing's economy highly depends onpetroleum and related industries.Daqing's oilfield is China's largest and the world's fourth most productive. Petroleum accounts for 60.8% of GDP. In 2011, Daqing's gross domestic product (GDP) wasRMB374 billion yuan, representing a rise of 12.1% year on year. Primary industries output (including agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry and the fisheries) increased by 13.5% to RMB13.29 billion. Secondary and value-added industries and construction output experienced an increase of 10.1%, reaching RMB307 billion, while the tertiary industry output increased 22.9% to RMB53.74 billion.[14] In 2015 Daqing had a GDP ofRMB 298.35 billion.[15]
Daqing exports over 10 million tons of crude oil each year. Over 160 varieties of paraffin wax, ethylene, tar oil and benzene are exported to more than 10 nations and regions including the US, the UK, Thailand and Hong Kong.
In 2011, total import and export volume in Daqing reached US$2.16 billion, up by 40.1%.[14] Export volume was US$550 million and import volume was US$1.61 billion. Daqing's main exports include six categories of petrochemical products, construction materials, processed foodstuffs, office furniture and mechanical and electronic equipment.[16]
There were 32 banking institutions in Daqing by the end of 2006; none were foreign-invested banks.[16] In 2011, savings deposits in Renminbi and foreign exchange totaled 170.5 billion RMB.[14] The local finance sector plays an important role in building up Daqing's Century Oilfield and in developing new industries.
The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Agricultural Bank, China Construction Bank, Bank of China, China Communications Bank, the Everbright Bank, Guangdong Development Bank, the Daqing Urban Commercial Bank, Daqing Rural Credit Cooperative Union and the County Urban Credit Cooperative are the major banks serving Daqing.
Generated by the history of the city, Daqing has a culture centering around the "Daqing Spirit, the Daqing People," which is said to represent deep personal commitment in pursuing national goals, self-sufficient and frugal living, and urban-rural integrated land use.[2]: 3 Daqing's urban-rural landscape was said to embody the ideal communist society described by Karl Marx because it eliminated (1) the gap between town and country, (2) the gap between workers and peasants, and (3) the gap between manual and mental labor.[2]: 3
"Daqing Spirit, Daqing People" was the title of an April 20, 1964 article inPeople's Daily which extolled the success of Daqing oil field workers.[2]: 148 The most influential of many articles praising Daqing that appeared in state media around that time, "Daqing Spirit, Daqing People" was the first text to compare Daqing toYan'an, the revolutionary base area where the Communist Party re-grouped following theLong March before going on to win theChinese Civil War.[2]: 148
Wang Jinxi (Chinese:王进喜;pinyin:Wáng Jìnxǐ, known as "Iron Man" Wang), a petroleum worker on the Daqing Oilfield who led No. 1205 drilling team, was honored as a national hero due to his contributions to the petroleum industry of China. Daqing was established by the central government as a model for the secondary industry during the 1960s. In order to illuminate the entrepreneurial history of Daqing and its people, several films were made by companies in China.[18]
In 1964, chief director of the Central Experimental TheaterSun Weishi and her husband, the actorJin Shan, traveled to Daqing to live and work with the oil workers and their families.[2]: 141 The next year, the Communist Party journalRed Flag published an article by Sun which praised the Daqing people.[2]: 141–142 After living in Daqing for two years, Sun Weishi returned to Beijing to produce the playThe Rising Sun, which was based on the experiences of people in Daqing, particularly Daqing women.[2]: 142