Jun 30

A group of 29 Beijing companies bought up all the farm produce on offer from central Taiwan at an exhibit Sunday, valued at 700,000 yuan ($102,447).

The companies, including supermarkets, chain restaurants and online sellers, also agreed with the exhibitors to hold Taiwan fruit festivals, tea sales and food festivals in Beijing.

Some companies also promised to regularly stock Taiwan fruit and rice.

The group tour to the exhibition was organized by the Beijing Municipal Commission of Commerce (BMCC) and the Taiwan Affairs Office of the Beijing Municipal Government.

Yan Xiaoyan, deputy director of the BMCC, said the commission would promote sales of Taiwan farm produce in Beijing, where there was strong consumer demand for such food.

Direct air links between the mainland and Taiwan have made it easier and cheaper to ship perishable items such as fruit.

The two-day event concluded Sunday.

Jun 30

According to the statement published on the ministry’s web site, the United States Department of Commerce launched three dual investigations, namely anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations, in ten days into China-made wire trays, steel grating, and stranded steel wire on June 26, June 19 and June 17.

The Chinese steel industry is strongly dissatisfied with the situation, said the statement.

Such practice is sending wrong signals of trade protectionism to the US domestic market and the international society, and could seriously affect the interest of downstream part of the US steel industry, while damaging the normal steel trade between the two countries, said the statement.

If anti-dumping duties are put upon exported steel products from China, prices would be pushed up, and US downstream manufacturers would have to buy more expensive steel products.

China will closely watch the ongoing investigations and preserve the rights of appealing the cases to the World Trade organization (WTO), said the statement.

Jun 30
Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang returned to Beijing Monday evening after his official visit to Turkmenistan, Finland and Uzbekistan.

Li made the week-long visit at the invitation of Finnish Prime Minister Matti Vanhanen and the governments of Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

Source:Xinhua

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2009-06/30/content_285322.htm

Jun 30

Spartanburg High School Orchestra students and faculty share their American spirit in Beijing, following a once-in-a-lifetime performance on The Great Wall on June 16.

Jun 30
Beijing Bolsters the Barriers
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When Beijing announced its $586 billion economic stimulus plan earlier this year, optimists hoped it might help the U.S. address a nagging problem: its staggering trade deficit with China. With the Chinese economy growing more briskly once more, the reasoning went, mainland companies would suck in lots of U.S. machinery and technology just as financially strapped American consumers bought fewer Chinese DVD players, sneakers, and the like.

Those hopes may have been overblown. Though the U.S. trade deficit has slimmed, Beijing has recently introduced a host of policies aimed at boosting exports while making it harder for foreign companies to sell in the mainland. China has renewed steps that keep its currency undervalued against the dollar, reinstated tax breaks on exports, and told government entities to buy Chinese products. With efforts to boost domestic consumption flagging, Beijing remains reliant on the “narcotic” of export-led growth, says former U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab. “Accumulating surpluses makes [China] feel strong and powerful.”

On June 23, Washington filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization alleging that Beijing has reserved key raw materials such as magnesium and zinc for its own companies. U.S. and European experts say that gives Chinese industry an advantage over foreign manufacturers who need those materials too.

Lots of smoke, to be sure. But that doesn’t mean a trade war is imminent. While many of Beijing’s policies spark anger in the U.S., Washington has few clear remedies. It can file cases at the WTO on issues it believes it can win and crank up diplomatic pressure on Beijing. But many “protectionist” measures decried by American trade hawks are acceptable under WTO rules. For instance, Beijing never signed a WTO agreement on government purchases when it joined the trade body in 2001. Likewise, Beijing’s moves to exempt many exports from a 17% value-added tax would seem to comply with WTO rules and are similar to policies in Europe and elsewhere. Essentially, China is restoring old tax breaks it revoked a few years ago, says China expert Nicholas R. Lardy of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington.

No “Leg to Stand On”

The U.S. may have a more solid case regarding Chinese efforts to restrict sales of scarce minerals. The fact that Chinese companies can buy these materials while foreigners can’t violates WTO rules, U.S. and European experts say. There is a good chance Beijing will back down on this issue “because they don’t have a leg to stand on,” says Lardy.

Whether or not Beijing is within its rights, the appearance of protectionism is likely to fuel pressure for retaliation. Before 2007, China enjoyed trade surpluses with the U.S. but had a deficit with other countries. By last year, China’s surplus with the entire world had passed $400 billion, notes University of Maryland Robert H. Smith School of Business economist Peter Morici. And with the yuan still undervalued against the dollar by at least 20%, the U.S. deficit could start ballooning when Americans start buying again. “We cannot grow with the kind of trade deficit we have with China,” Morici predicts. “And we’ll continue to have that trade deficit as long as China keeps changing the rules.” The policy dilemma for Washington, meanwhile, will only grow more wrenching.

With Esmé E. Deprez in New York and Steve LeVine in Washington D.C.

Jun 21
Beijing to launch clean energy plan
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BEIJING: Ten million energy-saving lamps will be distributed on the streets of Beijing starting Monday in one of the largest ever energy conversion exercises of its kind.

With soaring power costs in China, the government estimates replacing incandescent lamps with energy-saving alternatives could save $35 million a year in electricity bills, said the Beijing Municipal Commission of Development and Reform on Saturday.

Over the next two months, its officers will trawl Beijing’s streets making their case to the city’s residents.

The government has struggled to encourage residents in cities to swap incandescent bulbs for greener alternatives given the relatively higher costs of energy-efficient lamps. But this initiative will make the lamps available for sale at a much-reduced price of just 1 Yuan (Rs. 7) — 10 per cent of the market price.

The energy conversion programme is part of the Chinese government’s plan to distribute 100 million energy-friendly light bulbs in cities across China this year. The programme is partly funded by China’s massive $586 billion stimulus package, which allocated $30 billion exclusively for green energy projects.

Achieving a significant reduction in electricity consumption in urban households is crucial for China to reach its ambitious target of producing one-fifth of all its energy needs from renewable energy by 2020. Lighting accounts for 19 per cent of the country’s energy needs, according to the Joint U.S.-China Cooperation on Clean Energy (JUCCCE), a non-profit organisation that is working to promote clean energy and energy efficiency in China.

The organisation estimates that 10 million energy-saving lamps will eliminate the need for ten 50-megawatt coal-fired plants and save about 3.7 million tonnes of carbon dioxide over four and half years. Improving energy efficiency has become a priority for the Chinese government. In spite of huge investments in renewable energy, coal consumption in China still grew by 7 per cent last year, even as prices rose, and accounted for 43 per cent of global coal consumption.

The government envisages the energy conversion programme as one important way of controlling consumption in cities. The local government in Beijing began a “green lighting” project in 2004. Since then, around 3 million energy-efficient lamps have been installed in public service buildings, mainly government offices, schools and hospitals.

Large-scale operation

 

 

But this project will for the first time bring energy-efficient lamps to Chinese households on such a large scale.

The JUCCCE is leading a similar campaign in Shanghai, where the organisation, working with the Shanghai municipal government, is distributing 10 million energy-saving lamps free of cost to the city’s residents. Starting in April 2008, the Chinese government introduced subsidies on energy-efficient light bulbs of 30 per cent on wholesale and 50 per cent on retail purchases.

According to a recent report by the Centre for American Progress, an estimated 62 million bulbs had been subsidised by January 2009, saving an estimated 3.2 billion kilowatt hours of electricity annually, or roughly 5 per cent of the annual energy consumption of a city like Beijing.

Jun 21

Chinese President Hu Jintao arrived in Beijing Sunday morning after attending the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the first meeting of BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) leaders in Russia’s Ural city of Yekaterinburg.

He also paid state visits to Russia, Slovakia and Croatia from June 18 to June 20.

Jun 21
Chinese President Hu Jintao arrived in Beijing Sunday morning after attending the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the first meeting of BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) leaders in Russia’s Ural city of Yekaterinburg.

He also paid state visits to Russia, Slovakia and Croatia from June 18 to June 20.

Source: Xinhua

Jun 21

BEIJING – Beijing’s notoriously dirty air got cleaner during last summer’s Olympic Games, but the weather played a larger role than the government’s massive pollution control measures, a new report says.

The first major study on air pollution during the Olympics found that conditions in Beijing were far worse than at other recent Olympics, even with the government’s cleanup campaign. Particulate levels often exceeded what the World Health Organization considers safe.

The report was published Friday in the journal Environmental Science and Technology, and funded by the National Science Foundation in the U.S. and the National Science Foundation in China.

The Chinese government’s plans to control air pollution for the Olympics gave international researchers a unique opportunity to observe a large-scale experiment. Scientists from Oregon State University and Peking University looked at Beijing’s worst air pollutant — tiny dust particles known as particulate matter — over an eight-week period before, during and after the games.

When Beijing won the bid for the Olympics in 2001, China poured some $20 billion into “greening” the city, including doubling the number of subway lines, retrofitting factories with cleaner technology and building urban parks.

Beijing officials also imposed drastic cleanup measures just before the games in mid-July, including pulling half the city’s 3.3 million vehicles off the roads, halting most construction and closing dozens of factories.

The study found that particulate air pollution decreased by about one-third during the two-week Olympic period compared with other periods.

But further investigation suggested that the weather, such as rainfall and strong winds from the north and northwest, played a much larger factor in clearing the air.

Meteorological conditions accounted for 40 percent of the variation in concentrations of coarser particulate matter, or PM 10, while pollution control measures accounted for only 16 percent, the study said.

“It was a giant experiment and a noble effort. But in the end, the extra added measures didn’t help reduce PM concentration as much as had been expected,” said Staci Simonich, an associate professor of chemistry and toxicology at Oregon State University who worked on the study.

At the same time, the findings don’t invalidate the government’s efforts, said Zhu Tong, professor at Peking University’s College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, and a co-researcher on the project.

“We learned a lot about how air pollution forms in a mega-city like Beijing, and how much pollution comes from which sources,” Zhu said.

The findings also showed that the weather ushered some air pollution in to Beijing from industrial regions south of the capital that were not subject to pollution curbs, including Hebei, Shandong, and Shanxi. Those results indicated the difficulties in trying to control pollution from a city level when air masses tend to move regionally.

The level of particulate pollution that athletes faced in Beijing was twice as bad as in Athens, three times worse than Atlanta and 3.5 times higher than that of Sydney.

Levels of PM 10, the coarser particulate matter, exceeded levels that the WHO considered safe about 81 percent of the time, while concentrations of the smaller particulate pollution PM 2.5, which can cause more serious health consequences, exceeded WHO guidelines 100 percent of the time.

However, there has been no evidence so far of any health problems linked to the short-term exposure of athletes or spectators during the Olympics, researchers noted.

Pollution expert Fang Ming, now retired from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said the findings don’t break new ground in terms of understanding how air pollution works.

“Having said that, it is useful to know the effectiveness of the huge ‘green Olympic’ effort to clean up the air in Beijing,” he said in an e-mailed response.

Overall, the Olympic pollution control efforts were worthwhile because “it demonstrated to the Chinese government that they need to pay more attention to the environment and it is good for the country. It also says that this is doable and the people have to be a part of the effort,” he said.

Jun 21

BEIJING – Beijing’s notoriously dirty air was cleaner during last summer’s Olympic games, but pollution levels were still much worse than at recent Olympics, despite a massive Chinese cleanup campaign, a new report said.

Athletes in Beijing faced pollution levels that were up to 3.5 times higher than those in recent Olympic cities like Athens, Atlanta and Sydney, said the study published Friday in the journal Environmental Science and Technology. The pollution often exceeded what the World Health Organization considers safe.

The joint American-Chinese study — the first major one published on air pollution during the Olympics — also found that the weather, and not the Chinese government’s strict controls imposed in the run-up to the games, played the largest role in clearing the air.

The government’s plans to control air pollution for the event gave international researchers a unique opportunity to observe a large-scale experiment. Scientists from Oregon State University and Peking University looked at Beijing’s worst air pollutant — tiny dust particles known as particulate matter — over an eight-week period before, during and after the games.

China poured some $20 billion into “greening” the city after it won the bid in 2001, including doubling the number of subway lines, retrofitting factories with cleaner technology and building urban parks.

Government officials also imposed drastic cleanup measures just before the games in mid-July, including pulling half the city’s 3.3 million vehicles off the roads, halting most construction and shutting down dozens of factories.

The study — funded by the National Science Foundation in the U.S. and the National Science Foundation in China — found that the level of particulate pollution in Beijing was twice as bad as in Athens, Greece; three times as bad as in Atlanta, Georgia; and 3.5 times as bad as in Sydney, Australia.

Researchers found that particulate air pollution did drop by about one-third during the two-week Olympic period. But coarser particulate matter, PM 10, exceeded levels the WHO considers safe about 81 percent of the time, while the smaller particulate pollution PM 2.5, which can cause more serious health consequences, exceeded WHO guidelines 100 percent of the time.

“It was a giant experiment and a noble effort. But in the end, the extra added measures didn’t help reduce PM concentration as much as had been expected,” said Staci Simonich, an associate professor of chemistry and toxicology at Oregon State University who worked on the study.

There has been no evidence so far of any health problems linked to the short-term exposure of athletes or spectators during the Olympics, researchers noted.

Further investigation suggested that weather conditions, such as rainfall and strong winds from the north and northwest, played a much larger factor in clearing the air than the pollution curbs.

Meteorological conditions accounted for 40 percent of the variation in concentrations of coarser particulate matter, while pollution control measures accounted for only 16 percent, the study said.

The findings also showed that the weather ushered some air pollution into Beijing from industrial regions south of the capital that had less severe pollution curbs, including Hebei, Shandong, and Shanxi. Those results indicated the difficulties in trying to control pollution at a local level when air masses tend to move regionally.

The findings don’t invalidate the government’s efforts, said Zhu Tong, professor at Peking University’s College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, and a co-researcher on the project.

“We learned a lot about how air pollution forms in a mega-city like Beijing, and how much pollution comes from which sources,” Zhu said.

Scientists also noted that their pollution measurements were about 30 percent higher than official figures by the Beijing Environmental Protection Bureau, though they said that reflected a difference in methodology.

Pollution expert Fang Ming, now retired from Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said the findings don’t break new ground in terms of understanding how air pollution works.

“Having said that, it is useful to know the effectiveness of the huge ‘green Olympic’ effort to clean up the air in Beijing,” he said in an e-mailed response.

Overall, the Olympic pollution control efforts were worthwhile because “it demonstrated to the Chinese government that they need to pay more attention to the environment and it is good for the country. It also says that this is doable and the people have to be a part of the effort,” he said.

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