Beijing authorities warn of more traffic chaos Beijing (AFP) Sept 24, 2010 Authorities warned Friday of traffic gridlock in Beijing over the weekend as a national holiday ended, state media reported, further exacerbating the capital's congestion woes. People in China have just had three days off to mark the mid-autumn festival, a popular harvest holiday, but are having to work over the weekend to make up for lost time. The Beijing Road Traffic Bureau warned of increased traffic flows over the weekend, with morning rush hour expected to start earlier than usual and evening peak time also prolonged, the official Xinhua news agency said. The latest warning comes after Beijing -- already notorious for bottlenecks -- last week recorded some of its worst traffic in history, with a record 140 jams on Friday evening. In August, a traffic jam stretching more than 100 kilometres (60 miles), consisting mainly of trucks, was reported to have been at a standstill for over a week on a highway linking the capital with Inner Mongolia. According to the report, the number of vehicles on roads in the capital -- which currently stands at around 4.5 million -- is expected to hit five million by the end of the year. China last year overtook the United States as the world's largest car market. It has embarked in recent years on a huge expansion of its national road system, but the volume of traffic periodically overwhelms the network.
earlier related report With a large business delegation in tow, Medvedev will travel to China at the invitation of Chinese President Hu Jintao, his second trip to the country since assuming office in 2008. The packed agenda of his three-day trip will include visits to Beijing and Shanghai and a visit to Dalian, a port in northeast China which was under Russian control at the turn of the 20th century. Relations between Moscow and Beijing -- once bitter foes during the Cold War -- have a turbulent history. The two nations position themselves as counterweights to US global dominance and the Kremlin likes to call its ties with Beijing a "strategic partnership." But Moscow has been watching China's formidable economic might with a mixture of awe and uneasiness. A key sticking point in ties is that Russian energy supplies still account for the bulk of economic cooperation, analysts say. The Kremlin, on a mission to modernize Russia's hydrocarbon-dependent economy, wants more Chinese investments and know-how, while Beijing is in no rush to commit, they say. "Russia has been increasing its energy and materials supply but China bought little else," said Chris Weafer, chief strategist at UralSib investment bank. "Medvedev will undoubtedly push for Chinese support for his modernization programme and will try to get a commitment from the government to encourage its major corporations to increase investment in the Russian economy and especially outside of extractive industries." Russia and China jointly run only three industrial parks, said Sergei Luzyanin, deputy director of the Far East Institute at the Russian Academy of Sciences. "That's a drop in the ocean, of course. It's clear that you need hundreds of them." "Russia, of course, is trying to entice large investment capital but it is not coming so far." Energy is also expected to be a major focus of the talks. Russia is keen to diversify its energy supplies and has been in talks with China, the world's largest energy consumer, over gas supplies. With pricing remaining a major issue, those talks have dragged on for several years and Russia's powerful prime minister Vladimir Putin travelled to Beijing last October to try to push the talks forward. Russia's energy czar and Putin's deputy, Igor Sechin, travelled to China earlier this month to lay the groundwork for Medvedev's trip. During Sechin's visit, Russia and China announced plans to jointly build a 5-billion-dollar oil refinery in the port city of Tianjin and a network of at least 500 petrol stations in the country. After talks with top officials in Beijing, Medvedev will travel to Shanghai for Russia Day at World Expo, said Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu. The Kremlin chief will kick off his China trip with a visit to Dalian, where he will visit a memorial to Soviet Union war dead. Known in Russian as "Dalny" (remote), Dalian came under Moscow's control at the turn of the century and was the scene of a major clash between Russian and Japanese forces in the 1904-05 war known as the battle of Port Arthur. Medvedev will visit the city at a time when China is entangled in a bitter dispute with Japan. Some analysts have said Beijing may try to secure Russia's support in the diplomatic conflict. In the latest development in what has been the worst diplomatic row in years between the Asian giants, Japan said Friday it would free a Chinese fishing boat captain arrested in the disputed waters over two weeks ago. "The Chinese might want to try and get the Russians in their corner on the issue of the Senkaku (islands)" known as the Daioyu islands by China, said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, political science professor at Hong Kong Baptist University.
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Spain's Endesa, Japan's Mitsubishi seal electric car deal Madrid (AFP) Sept 21, 2010 Spanish utility Endesa said Tuesday it had signed an agreement with Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi Corporation to work together on the development of electric cars. Under the agreement Mitsubishi will introduce its i-MiEV electric vehicle in Spain while Endesa, owned by Italy's largest power company Enel, would build infrastructure to provide power to electric cars in the country. The ... read more |
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