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Video: China's New Water Cannon Is Powered By A Jet Engine | Popular Science

"Video: China's New Water Cannon Is Powered By A Jet Engine
By Julie Beck
Posted 01.27.2011 at 3:01 pm

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China's Jet-Propelled Water Cannon

Built to battle skyscraper fires, this jet-propelled water cannon is the new pride and joy of China’s Luoyang City fire department. It is made from a jet-fighter engine and is capable of spraying 4 tons of water per minute.

The price tag of $456,000 seems to be worth it, as the water is said to blast fast enough to separate fires from their oxygen supply. It has a range of almost 400 feet and can rotate a near-full 360 degrees. And if the firefighting business slows down, China can always deploy the cannon to clean the sure-to-be-megadirty streets of its future megacity.

Watch the turbo-cannon’s awesome power in action in the video below:

http://v.ifeng.com/news/china/201101/b6f88957-df58-45da-b434-9b1bd444a7d3.shtml
 
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China to invest $608b in water projects - People's Daily Online January 31, 2011

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Efforts will be intensified to promote water conservation as well as the sustainable use of the precious resource, and the task will be a multi-trillion yuan national priority, a central policy document said.

The country will invest 4 trillion yuan ($608 billion) into projects during the next decade to improve water conservation, Chen Xiwen, director of the office for the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee's Leading Group on Rural Work, said on Sunday.

He made the remarks at a news conference held by the State Council Information Office on Sunday, a day after the CPC central authorities issued their first document of the year on Saturday.

The country aims to double its average annual spending on water conservation over the next 10 years compared to the 200 billion yuan investment in 2010, according to the document, also known as the No 1 document.

The government will also encourage loans to, and private investment in, the water sector to ensure funding for conservation, it said.

The CPC Central Committee and the State Council regularly release the No 1 document at the beginning of each year to address government priorities.

This is the eighth consecutive year that the No 1 document has addressed rural issues, but it is the first to focus on water conservation.

"Floods and drought in recent years have exposed weaknesses in water conservancy infrastructures," the document said, citing severe drought in Southwest China as well as severe flooding and mud-rock flows in many regions last year.

The document also said more efforts would be made to improve water quality and farmland irrigation, such as increasing areas under irrigation by 2.7 million hectares over the next five years.


Consequently, up to 10 percent of local land transaction fees should go to farmland irrigation projects, the document said.

Based on last year's total land transaction fees, this figure is expected to be about 60 to 80 billion yuan, Chen Lei, Minister of Water Resources, told the news conference on Sunday.

Li Maosong, a researcher who specializes in disaster-reduction work at the Chinese Academy of Agriculture Science, said the development of water conservation is a long-term goal.

He said the primary task is to fully assess farmland in the country to identify specific irrigation needs.

Other points addressed in the document include:

The country aims to build effective flood control and drought relief systems by the end of 2020.

The harnessing of major medium- and small-sized rivers will be completed during the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015).

The country aims to maintain annual water consumption at below 670 billion cubic meters in the next five years.

The central government will subsidize the maintenance of public benefit water projects in western regions and poverty-stricken areas.

The problem of water not safe to drink in rural areas will be eradicated by the end of 2015.

Xinhua contributed to this story.

By Jin Zhu, China Daily
 
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1,000 km per hour high speed train is in develop: report - People's Daily Online January 30, 2011

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The Southwest Jiaotong University in China’s Sichuan Province is endeavoring developing the vacuum tube high speed train with a speed of 600 to 1,000 kilometers per hour and is expected to release the train model in the next two to three years, according to Voice of China, the China’s national radio, on Jan. 30.

Limited by the energy consumption, noise and other factors in the atmosphere, the actual operating speed of a train is expected not to exceed 400 kilometers per hour at present.

In order to build the higher speed train, scientists proposed a new vacuum tube technology. Its principle is to build up an isolated vacuum tube separating from the outside air to run the maglev train in it.

The vacuum maglev train is then capable of running in a higher speed without wheel track friction and with much lower air resistance.

It was reported that this technology is expected to be widely adopted in around 2030, when the traveling time between Beijing and Guangzhou is expected to be cut into one to 2.5 hours to run the 2,300 kilometers distance.

By People's Daily Online

1000 km/h trains is the future. Nothing is gonna save more energy for massive public transport. It can become airlines of the future at least for within country travels.
 
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1000 km/h trains is the future. Nothing is gonna save more energy for massive public transport. It can become airlines of the future at least for within country travels.

Yeah, regional flights are a big drain on fuel. Flights here are already pretty overloaded and who knows what will happen if price of fuel goes up significantly.
 
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Macau Wynn

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Macau Venetian

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"Hong Kong to Macau ferry takes about one hour."

Macau January Casino Revenue Grows 33% to $2.3 Billion - Bloomberg

"Macau January Casino Revenue Grows 33% to $2.3 Billion
By Marco Lui - Feb 1, 2011 3:26 AM ET

Casino revenue in Macau, the world’s largest casino hub, surged 33 percent in January as Chinese gamblers placed more bets on baccarat and other card games.

Gambling revenue for the six companies that run casinos in Macau, the only place in China where they’re legal, rose to 18.6 billion patacas ($2.3 billion) last month from 13.9 billion patacas a year ago, according to data from Macau’s Gaming Inspection and Coordination Bureau.

China, which contributes more than half the number of Macau’s tourist arrivals, may post economic growth of 9.5 percent this year, according to the median estimate of eight economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Macau’s visitor arrivals rose 15 percent to 25 million last year with 83 percent coming from mainland China and Hong Kong, according to government data compiled by Bloomberg.

Casino gambling revenue in Macau rose 58 percent to 188.3 billion patacas last year. That’s more than four times greater than the $5.62 billion for the Las Vegas Strip, according to government data.

Wynn Macau Ltd., the Hong Kong-listed casino unit of Wynn Resorts Ltd., fell 3.7 percent to HK$20.85 at the 4 p.m. close of trading in Hong Kong, while billionaire Stanley Ho’s SJM Holdings Ltd. slid 3.7 percent to HK$12.58.

Sands China Ltd., the local unit of billionaire Sheldon Adelson’s Las Vegas-based company, declined 1.5 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Marco Lui at mlui11@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Frank Longid in Hong Kong at flongid@bloomberg.net"
 
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CNOOC pays $570m to buy into US oil shale operation - People's Daily Online February 01, 2011

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Visitors at China National Offshore Oil Corp's booth at a new-energy exhibition held in Beijing. Shares of the Hong Kong-listed explorer have risen 52 percent in the past 12 months, outpacing the 15 percent gain in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. Wu Changqing / For China Daily

China National Offshore Oil Corp (CNOOC) Ltd, China's largest offshore energy producer, agreed to pay $570 million in cash for a one-third stake in Chesapeake Energy Corp's Niobrara shale project, adding to its US holdings in crude oil production.

The Chinese explorer also agreed to pay 66.7 percent of Chesapeake's costs up to $697 million to drill and complete wells in the area, the companies said in a statement on Sunday.

The deal follows President Hu Jintao's state visit to the United States in January to expand economic ties, and will give CNOOC its second US energy asset. The Hong Kong-listed explorer will pay about $866 a hectare for the one-third stake in Chesapeake's 323,887 Niobrara hectares and has the right to a 33.3 percent stake in future acquisitions in the formation in Colorado and Wyoming.

"If you look at President Hu's recent trip to Washington, there seems to be a greater willingness in the US to encourage Chinese investment," said Wang Aochao, head of China energy research at UOB-Kay Hian Ltd in Shanghai. "We don't have all the details at hand, but it appears to be a fair price for these assets. The Chinese oil majors still think valuations generally for oil and gas assets are reasonable."

Niobrara covers 821,756 square kilometers and may contain 103.6 million barrels of oil, the US Geological Survey estimated in 2006 before Chesapeake, EOG Resources Inc and other producers began drilling the formation.

"The project will not only strengthen our solid resource and production base overseas but create value to the shareholders in the long term," CNOOC's Chief Executive Officer Yang Hua said in the statement.

CNOOC has risen 52 percent in Hong Kong trading in the past 12 months, outpacing the 15 percent gain in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. The shares closed at HK$17.20 ($2.00) on Monday, falling 0.69 percent.

The Chinese energy explorer forecast a 12 percent increase in oil and gas production in 2011 after spending about $8.4 billion in the past year acquiring assets in the US, Africa and Argentina. By contrast, output rose 44 percent in 2010.

CNOOC, based in Beijing, completed its $1.08 billion purchase for a one-third interest in Chesapeake's Eagle Ford project in South Texas in November. The Niobrara deal may be completed in the first quarter of this year, according to Sunday's statement.

"The win-win deal valuation is fair, based on our estimates, and CNOOC's strategy to further expand into the oil-rich shale deposits in the US," said Gordon Kwan, head of regional energy search at Mirae Asset Securities in Hong Kong. "The total investment of $1.27 billion in the deal through 2014 is manageable and equates to about 14 percent of CNOOC's budgeted $9 billion for 2011."

The Niobrara deal will lead to a reduction in US oil imports over time and the creation of thousands of jobs, Chesapeake's Chief Executive Officer Aubrey McClendon said in the statement.

"This transaction will provide the capital necessary to accelerate drilling of this large domestic oil and natural gas resource," McClendon added.

Chesapeake expects to double its drilling rigs to 10 by the end of the year from the five currently operating in Wyoming's Powder River and Colorado's Denver-Julesburg basins. It plans to have 20 rigs working by the end of 2012.

Chesapeake, the most active US gas and oil driller, has 16 wells producing in those basins with initial output as high as 1,000 barrels of oil and 3 million cubic feet of natural gas a day, according to the company.

The companies plan to eventually produce the equivalent of as much as 5 billion barrels of oil from the basins.

Bloomberg News

Source:China Daily
 
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Baidu eats Google's lunch

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-02-01/b...-estimates.html

"Baidu jumps after 4Q profit, sales beat estimates
Feb 1, 2011 12:50 PM ET
By The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Shares of Baidu.com Inc., the leading search engine in China, jumped on Tuesday after the company's fourth-quarter profit more than tripled, easily topping Wall Street expectations.

THE SPARK: The Beijing company said on Monday that its profit soared to 1.16 billion yuan ($175.9 million)
, or 3.32 yuan (50 cents) per American depositary share during the December quarter. That compares with year-earlier earnings of 427.9 million yuan, or 1.23 yuan per U.S.-traded share.

Excluding stock options expenses, the company earned 52 cents per share. Analysts expected 47 cents per share, according to FactSet.

Revenue nearly doubled to 2.45 billion yuan ($371.3 million) from 1.26 billion yuan, beating the $350.3 million analysts were expecting.

THE BIG PICTURE: After repeated clashes over censorship, Google Inc. closed its China-based search engine in March. Mainland users usually can reach Google's Chinese-language site in Hong Kong, a Chinese territory with no Internet filtering, but Baidu dominates.

The research firm Analysys International says that as of September, 73 percent of Web searches in China are done on Baidu. Google snags only 22 percent.

THE ANALYSIS: Baidu's results prompted Kaufman Bros. analyst Mayuresh Masurekar to raise his price target to $142 from $118. That represents a 21 percent gain over the current trading price of $117.29. He stands by his "Buy" rating on the company.

Masurekar said that while the research group iResearch estimates Baidu's market share at 72.9 percent, the results suggest an even larger slice of Web surfers are using the search engine. He estimates Baidu's market share is now about 74.3 percent and expects its market share to grow between 1 and 2 percent every quarter.

But Baidu isn't just claiming more users, he said: it's also seizing on a growing market for online advertising in China. During the quarter, its active advertisers grew 24 percent, with 4,000 new advertisers added during that period.

Masurekar also raised his estimates for fiscal 2011, saying he now expects the company to earn $2.54 per share on $1.94 billion in revenue. Previously, he predicted the company would earn $2.37 per share on $1.88 billion in revenue.

SHARE ACTION: Up $8.66, or 8 percent, to $117.29."
 
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Guess they just don't like money:woot:

They made a sucker play. They thought they could ditch their China operation in return for some good will at home (US, Europe), but it turned out their share holders cared about the China market. Go figure... and their stock lost 30% of its value. It only bounced when China renewed their operating license.

Was a crazy market.
 
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Fast food battle heats up in China

By Patti Waldmeir in Shanghai
Published: February 1 2011 19:29 | Last updated: February 1 2011 19:29
Chinese consumers may have more spending power, but they also have less time to cook: a perfect recipe for the growth of fast food in China, where western and Asian chains are battling over the increasing appetite for restaurant meals.

In urban China, high property prices, long commutes, gruelling working hours, a later marriage age and smaller families all add up to more fast food.

The country’s food service industry has recorded double-digit annual growth since 2003 but is still only half the size of the US market, says AlixPartners, a consulting firm in China. The industry, estimated at about Rmb2,000bn ($303bn) in 2009, is forecast to grow to about Rmb3,000bn by 2014, according to industry estimates.

Multinational fast food chains, such as KFC and McDonald’s, arrived early and have come to dominate the market for western quick service meals.

Yum Brands, the US group that owns the KFC chain, opens more than one new restaurant in China every day. And it predicts it earned more operating profit in 2010 in China than in the US, for the first time.

Yum expects soon to have a 3:1 market share lead over its nearest fast food rival, but McDonald’s is investing heavily to catch up. The US burger group took two decades to get to 1,000 restaurants in China, but expects to take only four years to get to 2,000.

McDonald’s even offers home delivery in China. And now that China boasts the world’s largest auto market, it plans to equip half of its new mainland restaurants with drive-through windows.

But the battle for “stomach share” in China is about more than fried chicken and Big Macs. Thanks in part to an influx of venture capital and private equity funds in recent years, Asian fast food chains are increasingly competitive.

“Global brands are running into fierce local chains that are good at branding, and have raised the money to go national,” says Shaun Rein, of China Market Research in Shanghai.

Lim Meng Ann, China head of Actis, a private equity fund that invested $50m in Xiabu Xiabu, a Chinese hotpot chain, at the height of the global financial crisis in 2008, says that “given a choice, Chinese people would always prefer Chinese food”. He adds that Xiabu’s revenues have grown by “well over 50 per cent” per year.

No one is predicting that the Chinese will forswear burgers and fries anytime soon, not to mention KFC’s more indigenous offerings, including a dish sometimes referred to as rice porridge with pork and 1,000-year old eggs for breakfast – a dish so popular it often sells out before 8am.

But diners recently riding on Shanghai’s “Lunch Bus” – a free shuttle that takes white-collar workers from the city’s financial district to a local fast food emporium – made clear that, given the time and the choice, they prefer Asian.

Yan Bo, 25, a vegetable oil trader at a local bank, says he is “too Chinese” to lunch at McDonald’s.

“Last year I was very busy and I ate McDonald’s five times in one week,” he says ruefully. “But I only do that if I have no time at all. It’s too unhealthy.”

Lunch bus riders named Ajisen, a Japanese noodle chain that offers 98 menu choices, and Banana Leaf, a Thai curry chain, among their favourites. Little Sheep, a Mongolian hotpot chain part owned by Yum Brands, and Country Style Cooking Restaurants, a Sichuan chain that recently raised $82m in a New York IPO, and the ubiquitous Kungfu, are other Asian chain high-fliers.

“I don’t think it is necessarily a battle between western and Chinese quick service restaurants,” says Mr Lim of Actis.

Chain restaurants in general have very low market share, says Christian Paul of AlixPartners, but he predicts that will change. “Chinese consumers ... like a brand to give them comfort,” and that is just as true of food as of handbags, he says.

Xia Lianyue, vice-chairman of the China Fast Food Association, says rising urban salaries and long commutes are driving the emergence of an all-new “simple meal” market averaging Rmb50-Rmb100 per meal, a cut above fast food at Rmb30 per person. That will be the battleground for food companies in China: the battle for the stomach of China has just begun.

Additional reporting by Shirley Chen in Shanghai

We can kiss goodbye to good health if China starts to eat McDonald's like the Americans. Hopefully, Chinese fast food chains will grow much more, because KFC and McDonald's aren't healthy.
 
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I wouldn't mind the occasional fast food with chinese characteristics.
 
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China should increase precious metals - People's Daily Online February 01, 2011

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China should increase its gold and silver reserves, the Economic Information Daily reported on Monday, citing an interview with China's central bank adviser Xia Bin.

Increasing gold reserves at the "appropriate time" is in line with the strategy of internationalizing the yuan, the report cited Xia as saying. "Related departments" should employ a "buy in the dip" strategy over a very long period of time, Xia said.

Bullion soared nearly 30 percent in 2010, advancing for the 10th year, as the dollar dropped and investors sought a store of value amid currency debasement. China is allowing greater use of its currency for cross-border transactions, seeking to reduce reliance on the dollar.

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The report is "a positive factor for gold prices in the mid-and-long term," Hwang II Doo, a senior trader at Seoul-based Korea Exchange Bank Futures Co, said on Monday. Still "it didn't have immediate impact on prices as gold's gain has more to do with the unrest in Egypt at the moment."

Total gold consumption in China, the second-largest buyer, may gain 15 percent in the first-half, fueled by growing demand for alternative investments and a hedge against inflation, the China Gold Association said last week.

Imports of gold by China jumped almost five-fold in the first 10 months of last year from the entire amount shipped in 2009, the Shanghai Gold Exchange has said. Shipments were 209 metric tons compared with 45 tons for all of 2009, said exchange Chairman Shen Xiangrong.

The country increased gold reserves by 454 tons to 1,054 tons since 2003, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said in April 2009. The metal only accounts for 1.6 percent of the nation's reserves held by the People's Bank of China, according to the World Gold Council. China doesn't regularly publish gold-trade figures and rarely comments on its reserves.

Bullion for immediate delivery gained as much as 0.7 percent to $1,346.27 an ounce, and was at $1,339.25 at 12:53 pm in Seoul. The price rose 2.5 percent on Jan 28, the biggest intra-day increase since Nov 4 as escalating tensions in Egypt fanned concern that unrest may spread to other parts of the Middle East, increasing demand for an investment haven.

Bloomberg News

By Sungwoo Park, China Daily
 
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FT
Canada eager to increase timber exports to China

By Bernard Simon in Toronto and Leslie Hook in Beijing
Published: January 31 2011 22:38 | Last updated: February 1 2011 19:33
For British Columbia’s sawmills, China has become more than just a booming market. By persuading customers across the Pacific to build houses, schools and even apartment buildings out of wood instead of cement, the Canadians are realising a long-held dream: to shake off their dependence on the fickle and protectionist US.

China’s importance was underlined last month when the Obama administration sought arbitration over a US claim that the BC government unfairly subsidised sales of diseased logs from provincially owned forests. The complaint came on the heels of a separate ruling that Canada must impose almost C$60m ($59.8m) in new taxes on lumber exports to the US to offset other illegal subsidies.

But thanks to the surge in sales to China, Pat Bell, BC’s forestry minister, says he is less worried about such disputes than he used to be. “I foresee a time in the not-so-distant future when it isn’t a case of the Americans trying to constrain the amount of lumber we’re shipping,” Mr Bell said. “It’s a case of them wanting more.”

According to the BC government, the province’s lumber exports to China have soared more than tenfold since 2003, reaching an estimated 2.5bn board feet last year, equivalent to the output of 11 large sawmills. The target for this year is 4bn board feet.

China’s market share has climbed from a minuscule 1.3 per cent to about 20 per cent. Shipments to the US, where home construction has been battered by the subprime mortgage crisis, have shrunk from more than two-thirds of the total to slightly over 40 per cent.

Mr Bell foresees that the surge in business with China will give Canada valuable leverage in Washington ahead of the expiry in 2013 of the current US-Canada softwood lumber agreement.

“I would want to be able to sit down with the Americans and look at my watch and say: ‘Gosh, I’m a bit busy right now. I’ve got some customers in China that I’d like to talk to. Can we do this another time?’ ” said Mr Bell.

The 2008 earthquake in Sichuan province was a turning point in the Canadian industry’s campaign to promote wood as a viable building material in China.

The disaster flattened flimsy school buildings built from concrete and rebar (steel reinforcement bar), killing thousands of students and sparking a public outcry over construction standards.

“In the countryside, when the situation is appropriate, we should increase the number of wooden houses,” Meng Zhaohuai, a member of the National People's Congress, wrote after the earthquake. “Wood structures are not only environmentally friendly, more comfortable and more earthquake-resilient, but are also better for recycling compared to concrete.”

The three biggest Canadian exporters – Canfor, West Fraser Timber and Tolko Industries – supplied 2x4s, the basic plank size for home construction, for about 600 homes as part of the recovery effort.

Don Kayne, Canfor’s head of sales and marketing, says: “That was a big step. The Chinese were extremely impressed, and we backed it up.”

With financial support from the federal and BC governments, the industry erected demonstration projects to show wood could also be used for bigger buildings such as schools and retirement centres. A joint government-industry group, in conjunction with TEDA Development, a Chinese regional development company, is erecting the first wood-frame five-storey apartment block in Tianjin, south-east of Beijing.

China’s lumber consumption has steadily outpaced GDP growth, hitting 423m cu m in 2009, according to official statistics. Mr Kayne estimates that, without sales to China, North American softwood lumber prices would be about $50 per 1,000 board feet lower than the current $300.

Bolded part is funny :P
 
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