Quantcast
Results tagged “sinopec”
Sinopec to blame for foul smell around Shanghai

Sinopec to blame for foul smell around Shanghai

No surprise here: Sinopec Shanghai Gaoqiao Petrochemical Corp, located in Pudong, has been blamed for that foul odor wafting about Shanghai that we told you about last night. Reports of the odor started around noon on Sunday and continued into the evening. The Shanghai Environmental Protection Bureau still maintains that the low levels of sulfides found in the air shouldn't harm your health. Just your delicate sensibilities. more ›

Today's Links: Kim Jong (not that) Il, corrupt steel and petroleum industries, and Chu gets tough on climate change

Today's Links: Kim Jong (not that) Il, corrupt steel and petroleum industries, and Chu gets tough on climate change

  • NKorea's Kim Jong Il looks OK in new photographs [AP] "North Korea released new photographs of Kim Jong Il touring a factory following reports earlier this week that the 67-year-old leader has pancreatic cancer and less than five years to live. Wearing sunglasses and a short-sleeved shirt, Kim appeared generally OK in the images released Tuesday night — thin but no worse than in other recent photographs. He has grown frailer over the past year after reportedly suffering a stroke last summer."
  • How China Wins and Loses Xinjiang [Foreign Policy] "The government's crackdown on the Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim minority group that has long chafed under Beijing's rule, was nasty, brutish, and short. Overnight curfews were imposed. Thousands of police officers dispersed. President Hu Jintao left the G-8 summit in Europe to focus on putting out fires at home. But not all aspects of China's policies toward Uighurs and other minorities are characterized by such precision."
  • Something’s Rotten in Chinese Steel Industry [NYT Dealbook] "Long before four employees of the Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto were detained in Shanghai last week on suspicion of stealing state secrets, people working in China’s steel industry were complaining about bribery, deceit and a system turned rotten, The New York Times’s David Barboza writes."
more ›

1

personals

Enter our FREE personals site!

send a tip

tips@shanghaiist.com

Follow gothamist on Twitter