Now it’s graphite
...and we need to talk about Country Garden | October 20, 2023
Dear reader:
We are the world’s daily newspaper about China and too much important news drops on Fridays for us to leave it all for Monday, so from today we will resume sending you our Daily Dispatch on Fridays. Later today, you’ll still receive our Weekly which points to some of the stories you may have missed over the last seven days and stories, videos, and podcasts that we did not feature in our daily newsletter. Our Word of the Day is: graphite (石墨 shímò). Our Phrase of the Week is: Waterloo moment (滑铁卢 huátiělú) — click through for the full story. Finally: We’re only 12 days away from our NextChina 2023 Conference. Come meet us in New York on November 1 and 2 and spend time with some of the best-informed-on China people on the planet! If you’re not already a subscriber, sign up for our Daily Dispatch, or our free Weekly. |
Jeremy Goldkorn
Editor-in-Chief
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CURRENT AFFAIRS
China curbs graphite exports on national security grounds |
A lump of graphite |
China has announced that it will impose export controls on some categories of graphite, a crucial component in the production of batteries for electric vehicles (EVs), in order to “safeguard national security and interests”
China is the world’s top graphite producer, and Japan, the U.S., India, and South Korea are its top buyers
Although China insists that the new export controls are not aimed at any specific country, they appear to be another result of U.S.-China trade tensions.
Click through for more details and links.
Zhao Yuanyuan |
NEWS BRIEFING
Here’s what else you need to know about China today:
The U.S. said China is accelerating the expansion of its nuclear arsenal in its annual report on China’s military development. The Pentagon report, titled “Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China” (PDF here) released by the Department of Defense (DOD), claims that China currently has 500 operational nuclear warheads in its arsenal and will probably have over 1,000 warheads by 2030. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Máo Níng 毛宁 hit back at the report, stating that it “ignores the facts, is full of prejudice and spreads the theory of the threat posed by China.” Two days ago, the DOD accused China of conducting “a centralized and concerted campaign” against U.S. and allied counterparts in international airspace. It also released photo and video footage that show 15 recent cases of “coercive and risky operational behavior” by People’s Liberation Army (PLA) fighter jets crossing in front of U.S. aircraft in the East and South China Seas. Nigeria inked $2 billion worth of deals for new projects between its National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure and three Chinese partners, Nigerian Vice President Kashim Shettima announced on X today in the wake of his meeting with Chinese President Xí Jìnpíng 习近平 at the third Belt and Road Forum in Beijing. Another $4 billion worth of letters of intent was received for new projects and investments in different sectors of the economy, he added. Nigeria also signed contracts with China Harbour Engineering Company for the construction of the Lekki Blue Seaport in Lagos. Australia axed a plan to cancel a Chinese company’s lease over a strategic port, in the latest move to thaw bilateral tensions just weeks ahead of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s visit to Beijing. The Australian government today announced that “it was not necessary to vary or cancel the lease” by China’s Landbridge Group over the Port of Darwin in northern Australia, citing “a robust regulatory system in place to manage risks to critical infrastructure.” The port was leased to Landbridge in 2015 for 99 years, but the deal came under intense scrutiny since relations between the two nations nosedived over the COVID pandemic and a bitter trade dispute, driving Camberra to probe the agreement in 2021. Chinese state media is a sea of Xi today. Every single headline on the People’s Daily print edition front page begins with Xi’s name. All the stories about meetings he held with leaders in Beijing for this week’s Belt and Road Forum: Xi Jinping met with: Mongolian President Khürelsukh, Congolese President Sassou, Turkmenistan’s national leader and Chairman of the People’s Committee Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov, Egyptian Prime Minister Madbouly, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manai, Thai Prime Minister Saitha Thakur, Mozambican Prime Minister Maleane, Pakistani Prime Minister Kakar, and Rousseff, President of the New Development Bank. Xinhua News Agency’s top story is about another meeting that happened after the People’s Daily deadline: Xi Jinping met with General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party and President Thongloun Sisoulith
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BUSINESS AND TECH
We need to talk about Country Garden |
Illustration for The China Project by Derek Zheng |
Real estate giant Country Garden is on the brink of defaulting on its overseas debts after it let a $15 million coupon payment deadline expire this week.
Evergrande, the other troubled Chinese real estate behemoth, grabbed headlines when it defaulted on offshore bond payments in 2021, but Country Garden is arguably more important for China’s broad middle class because it has far more unfinished projects that have already been sold to impatient citizens. William Sandlund reports from Country’s Garden’s abandoned offices in Hong Kong on how the company got into this mess, and what’s at stake for China.
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WILDERNESS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
How China is attempting to change nature conservation |
Self-portrait of the author at Amnye Machen, one of the many glaciated peaks in Qinghai Province. In April, the government declared that all glaciers and permafrost areas on the Tibetan plateau would be included in the ERL system. Photo by Kyle Obermann. |
China is undergoing a great experiment — tightly controlled and driven by big data — that it hopes will offer an alternative way of protecting the planet.
Of course, there are loopholes, which present challenges to conservationists’ efforts.
Click through to read the latest in award-winning photographer Kyle Obermann’s series about China’s environment.
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MORE FROM THE CHINA PROJECT
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FROM THE NEWSBASE
Below are links from our NewsBase to other noteworthy reports published in the last 24 hours from and about China.BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:Electric vehicles Russia wants Chinese goods U.S. chip curbs Supermarkets Real estate and property development Evergrande Apple SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND ENVIRONMENT:New infectious disease control policy Jab maker in debt POLITICS AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS:BRI China’s nuclear arsenal U.S. governor vs. Chinese journalist Thaw in U.S.-China relationship? Taiwan Israel-Hamas war The Greater Middle East Australia Thailand Russia
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