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Search resuls for: "Chinese Ministry of Commerce"


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Subsidy investigations started by the European Union interfere with the mutually beneficial cooperation between China and Europe, and China resolutely opposes them, a Chinese commerce ministry official said. Subsidy investigations started by the European Union interfere with the mutually beneficial cooperation between China and Europe, and China resolutely opposes them, a Chinese commerce ministry official said. The official, who was not identified in a statement released by the department on Thursday, believes the probes launched by the European Union so far are all aimed at Chinese new energy-related enterprises, which will seriously damage the confidence of its firms in carrying out investment and trade cooperation in the EU. The remarks came from the head of the Trade Remedies Bureau of the Chinese Ministry of Commerce in a meeting with Martin Lukas, director general of the trade defense department of the European Commission, in Brussels, according to the statement.
Persons: Martin Lukas Organizations: European Union, EU, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, European Commission Locations: European, China, Europe, Brussels
AdvertisementChina's economy and markets were weak coming into 2024, but investor sentiment could worsen after the ongoing Chinese New Year break. "Service consumption growth will likely slow sharply after the Chinese New Year holiday on fading pent-up demand and weakening consumer confidence," the economists wrote. Authorities have pulled more than a dozen moves since January to try to stabilize the stock market rout and support downbeat property market demand amid its real-estate crisis. After all, there were suggestions earlier that authorities are considering a stabilization fund to rescue the flailing stock market. AdvertisementMainland stock markets are closed this week for public holidays.
Persons: , Rich Lesser, Lesser, Hang, Xi Jinping Organizations: Beijing, Service, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, Nomura, Boston Consulting, Hang Seng China Enterprises, Authorities Locations: China, Beijing, Hong Kong
The Biden administration announced Wednesday it would restrict investments by US venture capital and private equity firms, as well as joint ventures, in Chinese artificial intelligence, quantum computing and semiconductors. The executive order applies to investments in the cities of Hong Kong and Macao, as well as mainland China. She said the new edict suggested that Washington was “trying to ‘decouple’” US and Chinese venture capital, despite the administration’s insistence that it is not trying to halt trade with China. US venture capital investment into China has plummeted about 80% over the past year, according to PitchBook data. And the investment restrictions were long in the works.
Persons: Biden, they’ll, , Edith Yeung, Washington, Yeung, Kyle Stanford, Kaidi Gao, Tomohiro Ohsumi, , Gao, Washington —, Xi Jinping, Gina Raimondo’s Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, CNN, Race Capital, , PitchBook, Bloomberg, Getty, Investors, Washington, Sequoia Capital, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, US Locations: Hong Kong, China, Macao, Silicon, United States, “ Washington, US, , Shanghai, chipmaking, Stanford, Beijing
Dong Wenjie | Moment | Getty ImagesChina criticized President Joe Biden's long-awaited executive order regulating fresh U.S. investment in technology — but stopped short of issuing immediate counter measures. "China expresses its grave concern and reserves the right to implement measures," the Chinese Commerce Ministry said in the statement, according to a CNBC translation. Biden's order comes amid an escalating race for global technology supremacy. watch now"This seriously deviates from the market economy and fair competition principles that the U.S. has always advocated," the Chinese Ministry of Commerce added. The wording on Biden's executive order appears similar to a toned-down version of the initial Outbound Investment Transparency Act the Senate recently introduced.
Persons: Dong Wenjie, Joe Biden's, Prasad, Janet Yellen Organizations: Images China, Chinese Commerce Ministry, Biden, CNBC, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, Cornell University, Treasury, Senate Locations: Shanghai, Asia, China, China , Hong Kong, Macao, U.S, Japan, Netherlands, Beijing
A photo taken on Dec.14, 2020 shows a paddock of barley being harvested on a farm near Inverleigh, some 100 kilometers west of Melbourne. China on Friday lifted tariffs on Australian barley imports starting Aug. 5, a move that points to improving bilateral relations and would alleviate supply concerns after Russia suspended a humanitarian corridor to deliver key Ukrainian grains to global markets. These anti-dumping tariffs and countervailing duties were imposed in mid-2020 at the height of diplomatic tensions between China and Australia. Beijing slapped import tariffs on several Australian exports from wine and red meat to lobsters and timber. Besides this barley announcement, China also resumed Australian coal imports in January.
Organizations: Chinese Ministry of Commerce, World Trade Organization Locations: Inverleigh, Melbourne . China, Russia, China, Australia, Beijing
[1/3] Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk stands near Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao before leaving the Chinese Ministry of Commerce in Beijing, China May 31, 2023. Billionaire Elon Musk has been showered with praise by the Chinese public during his trip to China and while also securing audiences with three government ministers. "Elon Musk is just great, if only China could have someone like Elon Musk," said another. Musk's unannounced trip is the latest by a major U.S. CEO to China since the country reversed its zero-COVID policy and reopened its borders. The commerce ministry also did not respond to a request for comment.
Persons: Elon Musk, Wang Wentao, Tingshu Wang, Ma, Billionaire Elon Musk, Zeng Yuqun, Jin Zhuanglong, hasn't, Musk, Elon, Tim Cook, JP Morgan's, Jamie Dimon, Laxman Narasimhan, CATL's Zeng, Tesla, CATL, Martin Pollard, Josh Arslan, Wang Tingshu, Joe Cash, Zhang Yan, Brenda Goh, Edwina Gibbs Organizations: Tesla, Commerce, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, REUTERS, Tesla Inc, Fu Yan, Twitter, Shanghai, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, Tingshu Wang BEIJING, U.S, Shanghai, United States
Photos from the visit show Musk's private jet landing and the Tesla CEO's 16-course meal. Elon Musk touched down in China for the first time in three years on Tuesday — a key trip for the Tesla chief. Musk met with Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang. Musk is one of several US CEOs to visit China in recent months. Some analysts have hailed Musk's visit to China as a positive sign.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, Elon, Tingshu Wang, Ma, Jack Ma, Tom Zhu, Grace Tao, Qin Gang, Qin, he's, Zeng Yuqun, Fu Yan, Jin Zhuanglong, Tesla, CNBC's David Faber, Li Keqiang, Li Qiang, Dan Ives Organizations: Morning, Tesla, Twitter, REUTERS, Reuters, Tesla's, Beijing REUTERS, Chinese Ministry of Commerce, Foreign, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Amperex Technology, Weibo, Associated Press, Apple, Getty Locations: China, Beijing, Austin , Texas, Anchorage , Alaska, People's Republic of China, Shanghai
[1/3] Printed Chinese and South Korean flags are seen in this illustration, July 21, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/IllustrationBEIJING, May 27 (Reuters) - China and South Korea have agreed to strengthen dialogue and cooperation on semiconductor industry supply chains, amid broader global concerns over chip supplies, sanctions and national security, China's commerce minister said. Wang Wentao met with South Korean Trade Minister Ahn Duk-geun on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) conference in Detroit, which ended on Friday. Wang also said that China is willing to work with South Korea to deepen trade ties and investment cooperation. South Korea is in the crosshairs of a tit-for-tat row between the United States and China over semiconductors.
BEIJING, May 27 (Reuters) - Economic and trade development in the Asia-Pacific still faces many disturbances and challenges, China's commerce minister Wang Wentao said. Wang made the comments at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) conference in Detroit, where he met with several leaders and exchanged views on multilateral and bilateral economic and trade issues amid wider global trade rifts and uncertainties. "The Asia-Pacific region has always been the region with the most growth vitality, development potential and economic resilience in the global economy, but economic and trade development still faces many disturbances and challenges," Wang said, according to a statement from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce. Wang also discussed China's positions on supporting the multilateral trading system and promoting sustainable and inclusive trade development. World leaders have been looking for ways to fortify global supply chains, which are still wobbly in the post-COVID world.
China ban would slow, not halt, Western solar push
  + stars: | 2023-02-03 | by ( Lisa Jucca | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Beijing may ban the export of technology used to make solar panels, an industry which China dominates by controlling at least 75% of its global supply chain. The ban would not, however, extend to China’s solar panels themselves, protecting an export market worth $40 billion in the first 10 months of 2022, sector data shows. Losing access to Chinese solar technology, such as furnaces for melting silicon, would not be an insurmountable problem for the West. A ban would nonetheless hurt a Western push to boost domestic solar panel manufacturing. Export restrictions would include technologies used to produce large-size solar panel silicon wafers, black silicon and ultra-efficient silicon ingots, according to Chinese media reports.
The U.S. has brought in sweeping measures to cut China off from high-tech semiconductors, hobbling the chip industry in the world's second-largest economy. China has hit back against the measures, beginning an official complaints procedure against the U.S. through the World Trade Organization. China initiated a dispute against the U.S. at the World Trade Organization over Washington's sweeping semiconductor export curbs that look to cut the world's second-largest economy off from high-tech components. It said that the WTO dispute is a way to address China's concerns through legal means. China was among the countries that brought action against the U.S.Trade disputes via the WTO can take years to resolve.
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