Recently in Global Economy Category
By Michael Wines | The New York Times
September 2, 2009
Chinese officials imposed an information blackout on Tuesday on the situation along its border with Myanmar and began taking down tents that had sheltered an estimated 30,000 refugees who fled into China to escape recent fighting between Myanmar's military and ethnic rebels.
But news reports stated that many thousands of refugees remained in China, unwilling or unable to return to Myanmar, formerly called Burma, and it was not clear how the Chinese government intended to address their plight.
The Chinese authorities withheld comment on the border situation on Tuesday, aside from saying, in a Foreign Ministry briefing, that "necessary humanitarian assistance" was being provided. And they began ordering foreign journalists to leave the area around Nansan and Genma, Chinese towns on the mountainous border where the refugees have been housed in seven separate camps.
While about 4,000 refugees had returned to Myanmar on Monday, the day after the fighting ended, the pace has since slowed significantly. Only about 30 people crossed the border into Myanmar in a half-hour period on Tuesday morning, The Associated Press reported.
"It seems to be slowing down," one foreigner near Nansan said in a telephone interview on Tuesday. "There's still a large number of refugees in and around Nansan, both in the camps and hanging around." The foreigner, who asked not to be identified, said Chinese Army troops had stepped up patrols in the area.
An unknown number of those who fled to China during the fighting are Chinese citizens who have been conducting business in Myanmar, where China is building dams and other projects and has extensive mining ventures. They are unlikely to return soon.
China has insisted that the northern Myanmar region of Kokang is safe and stable after the fighting last week, in which hundreds of government troops overwhelmed an armed ethnic group, breaking a cease-fire that had prevailed for two decades. Human rights groups and others have warned that the junta's actions could ignite a wider conflict in the area, where other, better armed, ethnic groups also are resisting government control.
Thai newspapers and The Irrawaddy, an independent magazine that focuses on Myanmar, have reported that the government is sending fresh troops into the northern state of Shan in an attempt to consolidate its control there. The army wants the rebels to disarm and join a government border patrol force, as required under a new Constitution. Most of the rebels have resisted the order, which would effectively place them under government control.
Myanmar's military junta apparently seeks to take control of the region before elections, the first in almost 20 years, that are scheduled for next year. Outside monitors accuse the military junta of brutal human rights violations as part of its effort to stay in power. The Myanmar government has said that 26 of its soldiers and at least 8 rebels died in three days of battles.
The Myanmar conflict has thrust the Chinese government, one of Myanmar's only staunch backers, into an awkward situation. China has provided diplomatic support to the junta in exchange for access to its considerable mineral wealth and cooperation in efforts to suppress a growing cross-border trade in heroin and other illicit drugs. The flood of refugees prompted the Chinese to issue muted criticism of the junta, on Friday calling for it to secure Myanmar's borders.
By Keith Bradsher | The New York Times
01 September 2009
China is set to tighten its hammerlock on the market for some of the world's most obscure but valuable minerals.
China currently accounts for 93 percent of production of so-called rare earth elements -- and more than 99 percent of the output for two of these elements, vital for a wide range of green energy technologies and military applications like missiles.
Deng Xiaoping once observed that the Mideast had oil, but China had rare earth elements. As the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has done with oil, China is now starting to flex its muscle.
Even tighter limits on production and exports, part of a plan from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, would ensure China has the supply for its own technological and economic needs, and force more manufacturers to make their wares here in order to have access to the minerals.
In each of the last three years, China has reduced the amount of rare earths that can be exported. This year's export quotas are on track to be the smallest yet. But what is really starting to alarm Western governments and multinationals alike is the possibility that exports will be further restricted.
Chinese officials will almost certainly be pressed to address the issue at a conference Thursday in Beijing. What they say could influence whether Australian regulators next week approve a deal by a Chinese company to acquire a majority stake in Australia's main rare-earth mine.
The detention of executives from the British-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto has already increased tensions.
China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has drafted a six-year plan for rare earth production and submitted it to the State Council, the equivalent of the cabinet, according to four mining industry officials who have discussed the plan with Chinese officials. A few, often contradictory, details of the plan have leaked out, but it appears to suggest tighter restrictions on exports, and strict curbs on environmentally damaging mines.
Beijing officials are forcing global manufacturers to move factories to China by limiting the availability of rare earths outside China. "Rare earth usage in China will be increasingly greater than exports," said Zhang Peichen, the deputy director of the government-linked Baotou Rare Earth Research Institute.
Some of the minerals crucial to green technologies are extracted in China using methods that inflict serious damage on the local environment. China dominates global rare earth production partly because of its willingness until now to tolerate highly polluting, low-cost mining.
By Francois Bougon | Agence France Presse AFP | via UNCENSORED Yahoo! News
August 23, 2009
HENGJIANG, China (AFP) - The landscape near Hengjiang village offers a picture-postcard view of China, with rice paddies, water buffaloes and rolling green hills. It seems an unlikely spot to find industrial pollution.
But more than 1,300 children in this rural part of central Hunan province have tested positive for suspected lead poisoning, caused by a nearby manganese smelting plant, and parents are worried, confused and scared about the future.
"In late July, the children here started feeling unwell -- they had headaches, they couldn't sleep and were generally quite weak," said one 40-year-old man whose 13-year-old daughter has been affected.
The man, who refused to give his name for fear of trouble with the local authorities, said a group of parents complained to officials at the Wugang Manganese Smelting Plant in Wenping town, but they were ignored.
Now, the factory has been shut down, two plant executives have been detained, one is on the run, and two officials from the local environmental protection bureau are under investigation for dereliction of duty.
Another smelting plant in northern Shaanxi province was ordered to close its doors this month after more than 850 children were found to have lead poisoning, according to official reports.
The twin incidents highlight how China's rapid industrialisation over the last 30 years has led to widespread environmental damage, resulting in some of the world's worst water and air pollution.
Many poverty-stricken regions in China's rural interior have allowed the establishment of high-polluting industries without the necessary environmental standards in a desperate bid to boost economic growth, state media has said.
The manganese plant in Wenping -- which residents say has been spewing black smoke and dust since it opened more than a year ago -- was unlicensed, state media reported.
It is located within 500 metres (yards) of a primary school, a middle school and a nursery, the official Xinhua news agency reported.
In both Hunan and Shaanxi, angry villagers protested, demanding answers.
So far, they don't have any, and they fear for their children's future.
The father of the 13-year-old girl in Hengjiang says the lead level in her blood was 120 milligrams per litre -- surpassing the normal reading of between zero and 100 milligrams. His nine-year-old son so far is healthy.
"Most of the cases so far have not been that serious, but we really don't know what is going on. It's the unknown that scares us," he said.
Another villager, who also asked not to be named, approached, clutching requests sent to four local children to undergo secondary exams at a hospital in the provincial capital Changsha.
"They gave us initial results, and now they want to do new tests -- what does that mean?" he said.
In preliminary tests, 1,354 children -- 70 percent of those under the age of 14 in four villages near the plant including Hengjiang -- were found to have elevated lead levels in their blood.
A reading of more than 200 milligrams is considered hazardous. Children are more vulnerable to lead poisoning, which can harm the nervous system and impair motor skills.
The lead poisoning scare comes less than a year after China was rocked by a massive contaminated milk scandal. Six infants died and 300,000 fell ill after consuming products tainted with melamine, an industrial chemical.
"The reason why children are often victims here is specific to China," Zhao Lianhai, who leads an activist group for parents whose children consumed bad milk, told AFP.
"There is a lack of responsibility, and of willingness to investigate to the end to find out who is responsible. Officials protect each other, and there is a laissez-faire attitude towards their corruption."
Near the Wugang plant, one villager lambasted a local Communist Party boss who criticised the factory's failure to abide by environmental standards in the local press.
"On the day the plant opened its doors, he was there," the man said with visible disdain.
By Vivian Wai-yin Kwok | FORBES MAGAZINE via forbes.com
August 07, 2009
In addition to its cheap labor costs, China has another comparative advantage as the world's factory: Companies often pay almost nothing to pollute China's air, water and soil and to poison its people.
Need pliant workers to handle toxic chemicals? Wages are just $2.60 a day. What if the chemicals contaminate a town? Compensating a family of five costs just $732. Local water supply contamination makes 4,000 people vomit? That's just $7 per household. Cost of bribing local Chinese officials to look the other way rather than adhering to safety standards? Well, that's unknown, but given the frequency of China's pollution atrocities, apparently it is cost-effective.
While companies can get away with pollution atrocities for years, the Chinese government, in the long run, may have to pay a high price for allowing it: political instability triggered by the unanswered grievances of pollution victims.
Ammonia Leak in Inner Mongolia
In the past few weeks, local officials in Hunan Province and Inner Mongolia have been busy trying to control public anger after a spate of serious pollution incidents. In the latest one, 246 people--factory workers, emergency rescuers and nearby residents--were sickened by an ammonia gas leak at a pharmaceutical plant in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Wednesday morning.
Liquid ammonia spilled from a pipe that suddenly burst while a truck was unloading 30 tonnes of the chemical at the Chifeng Pharmaceutical Group factory. The Inner Mongolia government ordered people living within 2 kilometers and downwind of the leak to evacuate, and the local public security, environmental protection and work safety authorities set up a team to investigate the accident, according to China Daily.
An initial investigation blamed old pipes, the failure of emergency valves in the ammonia tanker, and the overloaded truck, as major reasons for the leak, Xinhua reported Thursday afternoon.
Ammonia, which is widely used as a household cleaner, is a corrosive substance. People exposed to very high levels of the chemical can experience severe burns to their skin, eyes, throat or lungs, according to the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a federal public health agency under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Sewage in the Water Supply
Residents of Chifeng, the run-down mining city in Inner Mongolia where the ammonia leak occurred, had only just recovered from another environmental disaster. Two weeks before the spill, thousands had been sickened when local water supplies were contaminated. More than 4,300 Chifeng citizens fell sick with diarrhea, vomiting and fever after drinking tap water. The city's water supply has yet to be fully restored.
Local officials say the water was contaminated after heavy rains on July 23 caused a power outage at a sewage pump station. The outage allowed raw sewage to flood into the well that supplies tap water to most of the city, various local media reported.
Chifeng citizens could have avoided the danger if they had been notified immediately about the incident. Instead, the local authorities stalled. They didn't alert the public for two days.
After the dirty water sickened the city, two senior officials, including the director of the Chifeng municipal construction commission and his deputy, were sacked. The state-owned water supply company agreed to pay 50 yuan ($7.30) in compensation to each household.
Metals Contamination in Hunan Province
Meanwhile, in the central province of Hunan, desperate citizens in Liuyang City have been trying to take to the streets again this week to protest unsafe operations at a government-protected factory. The pollution has already killed at least five people and poisoned another 500 with toxic pollution from cadmium and indium, metals used at the local factory.
About a thousand villagers from Shuangqiao, Jiankou and Puhua villages besieged a police station and city government headquarters last week to complain that the local government had failed to protect them from the deadly pollution.
This week, they didn't get the chance to protest. Instead, thousands of police officers were deployed to seal off major government buildings in Liuyang to prevent another riot. At least eight journalists who tried to interview villagers or take photos of the factory were detained, and told they could rely on the government to give them all the information they needed, according to the South China Morning Post.
Residents blame the Xianghe chemical plant, which had been illegally producing indium, a metal used to produce thin-film coatings for lamps and for liquid crystal displays (LCDs) in flat-panel video screens. Last week, the riot drew publicity, forcing the government to shut down the illicit plant.
The factory opened in 2004. Workers there were paid 18 yuan ($2.6) a day--about the cost of a McDonald's Happy Meal--to produce the highly toxic chemicals used to make the TVs which sell for more than an average worker's yearly salary.
Indium compounds are highly toxic, and can damage the heart, kidney, liver or embryos of those exposed to it. Cadmium, also used at the plant, can cause short-term lung damage in humans who inhale it. Prolonged exposure to cadmium causes chronic kidney disease. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says exposure to cadmium probably causes cancer too.
China is the biggest producer of indium, contributing over 40% of the global supply. Indium prices averaged about $685 per kilogram in 2008, down from a peak of $946 a kilo in 2005, based on the estimates by United States Geological Survey, which forecast a supply deficit for indium for at least another year.
High indium prices gave Xianghe an incentive to produce it illegally, probably with the cooperation of corrupt officials. A former Xianghe worker told the South China Morning Post that local environmental inspectors visited the plant occasionally, but that plant's management was always alerted ahead of time.
The factory and the local government tried to appease residents by providing free medical check-ups to the 2,888 residents living within a 1.2 kilometer radius of the factory plus compensation of about 5,000 yuan ($732) for a family of five, according to a report by AFP.
After the medical checks showed abnormally high concentrations of cadmium and indium in nearly a fifth of the area residents, local officials could no longer deny that Xianghe had discharged life-threatening pollution. In July, several villagers died, and autopsies showed their bodies contained massive amounts of indium.
Those who have been poisoned are demanding free medical treatment, and untested residents who live further from the factory demanded the government provide medical tests. After authorities sent sick villagers back home, protesters rioted last week.
The tension between citizens and the government is increasing, and thousands of police are monitoring villagers in an effort to prevent further riots.
A Plea From Environmentalists
Meanwhile, two environmental advocates aren't just counting on the Chinese government to stop pollution. They are taking a different approach, trying to publicly shame Western firms buying from Chinese polluters.
Green groups Friends of Nature and the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs called on Timberland to monitor two Chinese suppliers the non-profits say have repeatedly breached China's pollution limits.
The two Timberland suppliers are Shanghai Richina Leather, which has been fined by pollution watchdogs since 2004 for producing emissions higher than the legal limits, and Falcon Tannery in Guangdong, which violated water pollution limits for three years, according to the South China Morning Post.
By John Grobler - Mail&Guardian (South Africa)
July 27, 2009
In yet another example of sharp Chinese diplomatic elbows in African business it has emerged that the China National Machinery & Equipment Import & Export Company (CMEC) tried to charge Namibia nearly four times the going rate for the installation of a rail link to the Angolan border town of Oshikango.
On Wednesday the chief of the Namibian Defence Force, General Martin Shalli, was suspended by President Hifikepunye Pohamba in connection with an alleged $250 000 (R1,9-million) kickback from a Chinese company.
Shalli is suspected of taking the bribe while serving as Namibia's high commissioner to Zambia, in return for facilitating an arms deal.
Documents obtained by the Mail & Guardian show that CMEC offered to complete the 60km link between Ondongwa and Oshikango for a whopping R1,063-billion.
Since 2005 it has cost about R900-million to complete the first 250km from Tsumeb to Ondangwa.
The new section was to be financed under a special $100-million "concessional loan" facility, offered by Hu Jintao, the Chinese president, during his visit to Namibia early last year. The same facility was to be used for a controversial industrial X-ray equipment deal that is now threatening to engulf Hu's son, Haifeng, as well.
In a memorandum to his seniors on April 19, Robert Kalomho, the acting railway director, pointed out that the Chinese offer was more than four times as much as a bid from a local company, partnering with Italian industrial giant Lucchini.
The Chinese wanted R290-million for the rails and R773-million for the installation, documents showed. By comparison, the competitors had offered to do the same job for a total of R250-million, Kalomho noted.










The purpose of the website is to publish articles by journalists about a variety of topics concerning the People’s Republic of China. All journalists and the publications that publish their writings are clearly identified. All copyrights belong exclusively to the identified sources of these articles. | Powered by
Information + More