Saturday, July 7, 2012

China Energy Update 7/7


Restructuring economy amid slowdown
China Daily
BEIJING - The amount of photovoltaic capacity installed in China will reach 21 gigawatts by 2015, four times more than that in the government's initial plan, local media reported citing sources from the National Energy Administration. Although the ...
Brent crude prices slide under $100 for a barrel [Times of Oman]
Equities.com
"The latest round of news of central banks in Europe and China cutting rates actually raised concerns about the European and Chinese economies," said Victor Shum, senior principal of Purvin and Gertz energy consultants in Singapore. Concerns about ...
Harvard-Nanjing study releases 'bottom up' estimates of China's CO2 emissions
Newstrack India
The Harvard-Nanjing study constructs a "bottom-up" emission inventory that is specific to China's energy and technology mix and combines the results of Chinese field studies of CO2 emissions from diverse combustion processes with a plant-by-plant data ...
Oil prices plummet
Business Recorder (blog)
"With the economies of China and Europe also weakening, this spells lower global demand for energy." The disappointing jobs report kept intact hopes that the US Federal Reserve will move to bolster a sputtering economy. Adding to the bearish tone, the ...
'China Has Business Opportunities But Not Jobs'
Red Pepper
China's increased interest in Uganda's key industries such as oil and energy places his mission as the most vital link between Uganda and Foreign Direct Investments from Asia. During his seven-year tenure, the trade volume between Uganda and China has ...
 

Estimate of China emission said best yet

UPI.com - ‎Jul 6, 2012‎
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 6 (UPI) -- US and Chinese researchers say they've complete the first-ever "bottom up" estimates of China's CO2 emissions, measured both at sources and in the air. Atmospheric scientists from Harvard University and Nanjing ...

How much Co2 is China really releasing into atmosphere?

ScienceBlog.com (blog) - ‎Jul 6, 2012‎
Atmospheric scientists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and Nanjing University have produced the first “bottom-up” estimates of China's carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions, for 2005 to 2009, and the first statistically ...
 
 

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