News roundup: Chinese lab to study Ebola and other dangerous pathogens

Society & Culture

Top China news for February 22, 2017. Get this daily digest delivered to your inbox by signing up atย supchina.com/subscribe.


A new Chinese lab to study the worldโ€™s most dangerous diseases

A laboratory designed to research the worldโ€™s most dangerous communicable diseases is set to open in Wuhan in the central Chinese province of Hubei. The lab will allow Chinese researchers to study diseases like Ebola, SARS, and Crimeanโ€“Congo hemorrhagic fever, store virus samples, and โ€œact as a World Health Organization โ€˜reference laboratoryโ€™ linked to similar labs around the world,โ€ according toย the scientific journal Nature.

Initial approvals to build the 300 million yuan ($44 million) facility were given in 2003; if the final stages of a multitiered approval process go smoothly, the lab could open in June this year. Design and construction were completed with French assistance. Natureย says that Chinese scientists are โ€œcelebrating their entrance to the elite cadre empowered to wrestle with the worldโ€™s greatest biological threats.โ€

Environmental indicators to outweigh GDP in officialsโ€™ performance assessments

Communist Party mouthpiece newspaper the Peopleโ€™s Dailyย todayย reportsย that new measures will for โ€œthe first time in the history of the Peopleโ€™s Republic of Chinaโ€ give more weight to environmental protection than economic development in the assessment of officials. Nonetheless, progress may be slow. Growing the economy is difficult to reconcile with environmental considerations, and the top storyย on the Chinese versions of both the Peopleโ€™s Dailyย and the official Xinhua News Agencyย today is about a Xi Jinping speech on the importance of poverty alleviation (an English summaryย is here).

Bao Bao the beloved panda leaves Washington, D.C., for Chengdu ย 

Bao Bao, a panda cub born in 2013 in Washington, D.C.โ€™s National Zoo, boarded a plane bound for Chengdu yesterday. Back in China, she will join a panda breeding program and her offspring may be released back into the wild. Four American zoos have pandas on loan from China; when they breed, their cubs are expected to return to China by the age of four as per the terms of an agreement with the China Wildlife Conservation Association. Theย New York Timesย notesย (paywall),ย โ€œPanda rearing has become a rare and unusual field of partnership between the United States and China.โ€

NBCย has footageย of Bao Bao leaving the zoo and boarding a plane. FedEx, which provided the panda-themed cargo plane (pictured above) to take Bao Bao to Chengdu, has more information and photosย about pandas on planes. Thereโ€™s more on Bao Baoโ€™s destination in our The China Projectย Chengdu Directory.

ย โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor in Chief


Today on The China Project

โ€œWill Xiโ€™an become a megalopolis at the heart of the New Silk Road?โ€ is a report from The China Projectโ€™s Daniel Xin, who explores the new development plans for Chinaโ€™s ancient capital.


This issue of the The China Projectย newsletter was produced by Sky Canaves, Lucas Niewenhuis, and Jia Guo. More China stories worth your time are curated below, with the most important ones at the top of each section.


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

  • China to focus on tackling deep financial risks in 2017, senior policymaker saysย / SCMP
    Speaking in Hong Kong on Tuesday, a senior Chinese official from the Central Leading Group for Finance and Economic Affairs said that despite its official GDP growth figure of 6.7 percent last year, Chinaโ€™s economy โ€œlacked an inner driver for development,โ€ and that private investment โ€œremained tepidโ€ฆwhile financial risks led by growing property speculation were increasing.โ€
    Meanwhile, Bloombergย reportsย that โ€œChinaโ€™s $9 trillion moral hazard problemโ€ has become โ€œtoo big to ignore.โ€ In other words, the government needs to do something about investment schemes that promise risk-free returns because there is an explicit or implicit guarantee that the state will bail them out if they fail. The article says that the countryโ€™s main financial regulators are tackling the problem with a set of new rules, but that โ€œhistory suggests Beijing may have a hard time following through on reforms.โ€
    In related news: Bloombergย also has a storyย on the risks of state debt posed by โ€œpublic private projectsโ€ in which private capital funds public works in partnership with government organizations. Reutersย looks atย the problems caused by large-scale borrowing by the Liaoning provincial government, under whose watch the northeastern provinceโ€™s economy has been shrinking.


POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

  • โ€˜Never have I seen a man fallen from so high,โ€™ judge says as he sentences Donald Tsang to 20 monthsโ€™ jail for misconductย / SCMP
    Hong Kongโ€™s former chief executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen ๆ›พ่ซๆƒ was sentenced to 30 months in jail for failing to disclose conflicts of interest. Tsangโ€™s administration approved broadcast licenses for a company at the same time as he was negotiating over a penthouse apartment owned by a major shareholder of that company. The judge cut the jail term down to 20 months in recognition of Tsangโ€™s public service. In the wake of the conviction, the South China Morning Postย reportsย that there is fresh scrutiny on the business dealings of Hong Kongโ€™s current chief executive, CY Leung ๆขๆŒฏ่‹ฑ. ย 
  • Discipline investigations target universities and the Cyberspace Administration of Chinaย / Peopleโ€™s Daily (in Chinese)
    State media today prominently reported on a new round of disciplinary and anti-corruption investigations planned for 2017. The announcements repeatedly use a phrase that means something like โ€œdarkness hiding under a lampโ€ to refer to Party and state organizations that are supposed to be upholding Party norms but are, in fact, engaged in nefarious activities. There is also a focus on ideological purity. For a list of organizations that will be investigated, see hereย (in Chinese). Most are well-known universities, including Peking University and Tsinghua, but the โ€œLeading Small Groupโ€ of the Cyberspace Administration of China, headed by Xi Jinping, is also targeted.


SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

  • Steamed soup dumplings with vinegar or soy sauce โ€” that is the questionย / Guancha.cn (in Chinese)
    Steamed soup dumplingsย (ๅฐ็ฌผๅŒ… xiวŽolรณngbฤo), a famous Shanghai dish, have become the topic of a debate on Chinese social media. Specifically, the question of what to dip them in has aroused passions, with the main controversy being โ€œDo you dip in vinegar or soy sauce?โ€ as askedย (in Chinese) by one Weibo user, although other commenters voted for sugar, sesame, hot pepper chili oil, and peanut butter.
  • Beijing gets tough on noisy, dancing granniesย / SCMP
    Dancing in public spaces is popular among middle-aged and elderly Chinese ladies in many cities across China. While some people support this fitness activity, others criticize it as a public disturbance because of the loud music cranked out by tinny speakers that it usually involves. Starting in March, people in Beijing who dance in public to loud music could face fines or even detentions. The new regulations stipulate that โ€œoutdoor exercises organized by groups or individuals should not disturb public order or affect othersโ€™ work and living conditions.โ€ ย