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Friday
Jun112010

China This Week: Pipelines to Myanmar, US Penalties, Google's Concession

New EA correspondent Shan Shan launches our China This Week feature:

China Starts Pipelines to Myanmar

China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), the country's largest oil and gas producer and supplier, has announced that work has started on construction of two oil and gas pipelines between China and Myanmar.

In a statement posted on its website, the CNPC said that the pipelines, each of 1100 kilometres, are expected to run from the Kyaukpyu port on Myanmar's west coast and enter China at Ruili in Yunnan Province. The oil pipeline has a designed transport capacity of 22 million tonnes per year, while the natural gas pipeline has capacity of 12 billion cubic meters annually.

The statement did not say when the project would be finished.

US Sets Penalties on Chinese Drill Pipe: The US Commerce Department Tuesday set preliminary duties on imports of $119.2 million drill pipe from China. The department said in a statement that it "determined that Chinese exporters of drill pipe have received countervailable subsidies of 15.72 percent”. Based on these rates, the department will instruct US Customs and Border Protection to collect a cash deposit or bond.

The department said that it will make its final determination in August.

Agricultural Bank of China's Share Plan Approved: Agricultural Bank of China (ABC) has been given the go-ahead by Chinese regulators for what could be the world's largest share flotation. China's securities regulators Wednesday approved the initial public offering as the lender finalized preparations for its dual listing in Shanghai and Hong Kong.

ABC plans to sell up to 22.24 billion A-shares on the Shanghai Stock Exchange and up to 25.41 billion shares in Hong Kong.

However, analysts cannot agree on the likely amount Agbank will raise. It is considered the weakest of China's "big four" banks because its main customer base is within China's poorer rural communities. The offer is also complicated by the continuing uncertainly in global financial markets.

Natural disasters kill 157 in China in May: Natural disasters in China in May left 157 people dead and 22 missing, and caused about 45.17 billion yuan ($6.61 billion) in direct economic losses, the Ministry of Civil Affairs said on Wednesday.

Disasters, including floods, storms, landslides, droughts, snowfalls, freezing temperatures, and earthquakes, caused the evacuation of 842,000 residents and affected the lives of more than 64.57 million people, the ministry said in a statement on its website. Natural disasters hit 5.17 million hectares of farmland in May, destroying about 956,000 hectares of crops.

The damage caused by natural disasters in May was much more severe than in previous years. Yunnan, Guizhou, Hunan, Jiangxi, Guangdong and Chongqing were the provincial-level regions worst hit.

Shenzhen to Raise Minimum Wage: The minimum wage in Shenzhen City in south China's Guangdong Province will increase in July by 10 percent to 1,100 yuan per month ($161.04), municipal authorities said Wednesday.

"The pay rise will increase costs for labor-intensive companies, but I hope those companies will take this as an opportunity to speed up their technological innovation and industrial upgrading to boost their competitiveness," said Wang Min, head of the city's Human Resources and Social Security Bureau.

Shenzhen's move comes after a series of pay rises in China. Beijing will increase its minimum wage by 20 percent to 960 yuan from July 1.

The most dramatic rise has been at Foxconn, an IT contract manufacturer which will raise salaries for assembly workers at its production base in Shenzhen by 66 percent to 2,000 yuan per month from October 1.

Google agrees not to collect Wi-Fi data in Hong Kong: Google has ceased operating its Street View cars in Hong Kong and undertaken that, when the cars recommence driving, they will not collect Wi-Fi data, Hong Kong's   Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data said on Tuesday.

Google has agreed to provide the Commissioner access to the payload data collected by the Street View cars and shall render such assistance as may be required to facilitate the Commissioner's understanding of the process of the collection and the interpretation of such data.

In the meantime, Google shall securely store the data, including any backup, archives, or copies and shall not tamper with same or allow anyone to have unauthorized use or access which may contravene the laws of Hong Kong. Google has also assured to completely delete the payload data at the direction of the Commissioner and to provide the Commissioner with an independent third party's verification of the deletion.

Reader Comments (1)

Welcome, Shan Shan!
RE Myanmar, check this out:
This film on Myanmar's military ambitions claims Myanmar's ruling generals have started a programme to build nuclear weapon and are trying to develop long-range missiles.

Elections later this year are aimed at convincing the world they are moving towards democracy. But fearing attack from the US and an uprising by their own people, Myanmar's generals are instead digging themselves in with a nationwide network of bunkers.

With top-secret material gathered over five years, this film (http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/general/2010/05/201053110470990951.html" rel="nofollow">http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/general...) reveals how Myanmar is trying to become the next nuclear-armed North Korea. Key files and other information has been smuggled out by defecting army Major Sai Thein Win, a former deputy commander of a top-secret military factory at a town called Myaing. Before leaving, he smuggled out thousands of files detailing a secret programme by Myanmar's ruling generals to build nuclear weapons.

To check Sai Thein Win's claims, the Democratic Voice of Burma had him show the files to Bob Kelley, a former intelligence officer at North America's nuclear facility Los Alamos and an ex-director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Files and photos were also shown to Geoff Forden, a military research scientist from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

My thoughts: if only the IAEA had dirt like this on Iran! They don't. This material and these interviews without any attempt to hide the military defector's identity, are much more convincing than stories about a laptop and speculations about intentions (although I still don't trust anything the Iranian government says about its nuclear programme for other reasons..)

June 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterCatherine

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