China airlines refuse to pay EU carbon charge

Chinese airlines will not pay a charge on carbon emissions imposed by the European Union from January 1, a national aviation industry group said Thursday. The cap-and-trade scheme, which has angered the US and Chinese governments and airlines worldwide, came into force on Sunday after the European Union’s highest court rejected a challenge brought by US carriers last month. “China, of course, will not cooperate with the... [more]

Senior US diplomat in China after Kim Jong-Il death

Senior US diplomat Kurt Campbell was due to meet Wednesday with Chinese foreign ministry officials to discuss North Korea after the death of Kim Jong-Il, a US embassy spokesman said. Campbell, the assistant secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, is the first US diplomat to visit North Korea’s closest ally since the leader of the isolated state died from a heart attack on December 17. Kim’s death has sparked concerns... [more]

Chinese firms offered weapons to Gaddafi’s forces: reports

Chinese arms firms offered to sell weapons worth about $200 million to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi’s beleaguered forces in July, two newspapers reported, compounding pressure on Beijing’s brittle ties with the rebels who have ousted him. Following an earlier report in the Globe and Mail, the New York Times reported on Monday that documents found abandoned in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, indicated that Chinese companies offered... [more]

Lagarde to seek support in China, India, Brazil

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said on Sunday she plans to visit India and China and some African countries as well as Brazil to drum up support for her bid to lead the International Monetary Fund. “I have proposed to Brazil, China, India and certain African countries” to pay them a visit, she told Europe 1 radio, adding that the would travel on Monday to Brazil because it was the first state to respond to her proposal. Brazilian... [more]

Explosions in south China city wound at least 5

Three explosions, some from car bombs, occurred within a half-hour outside three government buildings in a south China city Thursday, blowing out windows and wounding at least five people, an official and state media reported. A car exploded outside the prosecutor’s office in Fuzhou city, then 10 minutes later an explosion went off at a district government building and 15 minutes later a car exploded outside a drug administration office,... [more]

EU first: Chinese workers rebuild Polish motorways

In the heart of the Polish countryside, about 500 Chinese workers toil frenetically on a new stretch of the A2 motorway connecting Berlin and Warsaw — an unprecedented sight both here and across the EU. Poland has become the first country in the 27-member bloc to open its doors to a Chinese company on a public works contract, thanks to the firm’s controversial low bid that beat out several European competitors. In a place where... [more]

N. Korea’s Kim in China ‘for development lessons’

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il pursued a secretive visit to China on Monday, apparently aimed at taking lessons from Chinese economic development back to his isolated and impoverished nation. His arrival Friday came just ahead of a tripartite weekend summit in Tokyo between China, South Korea and Japan, which agreed North Korea must show sincerity before stalled six-nation talks on its nuclear programme can resume. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao... [more]

Spyker finds new Chinese partner for Saab

Dutch car producer Spyker has announced that it has found a new Chinese partner to rescue the classic Swedish brand Saab, which was taken over by Spyker last year. The deal was unveiled today, with Spyker outlining plans to work together with Pang Da Automobile to resume production and distribution of Saab. Pang Da, the largest car distributor on the Chinese stock exchange according to Spyker, will have a 24 percent share in Spyker amounting... [more]

Bob Dylan addresses ‘China controversy’

In a rare and strongly worded message to his fans, Bob Dylan has denied claims his songs were censored by government authorities when he made his much-publicised China debut last month. The music legend, who played in Beijing and Shanghai on April 6 and 8, missed out some of his best known politically inspired songs such as “Blowin’ in the Wind”, sparking speculation he may have been censored. Addressing the “so-called... [more]

China eases trade rules, allows U.S. fund sales

China on Tuesday pledged easier access for U.S. companies to key sectors of its economy by removing barriers to its huge market in government contracts and offering a foothold to U.S. mutual funds. The pledges were made in two days of talks between the world’s two biggest economies which ended with both sides hailing progress in their often tense relationship. “We are seeing very promising shifts in the direction of Chinese economic... [more]

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