China's manufacturing industries had stronger competence compared with the world average in 2009 while its primary commodity sectors were less competitive, a latest survey has found.
China's diesel storage is likely to end in late December, National Business Daily reported Thursday.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) on Wednesday approved 14 more brokerages to participate in a pilot margin-trading and short-selling business, adding up to a total of 25, Securities Daily reported Thursday.
The All-China Environment Federation, at the 2010 Annual Meeting of Chinese Environmental Civil Society Organizations on Sustainable Development in Hangzhou on Nov 13, called for all civil society organizations to form an alliance to reject support from tobacco enterprises in any form.
A man whose wife and son were abducted 12 years ago from Chengdu, Sichuan province met them again in Shanxi province on Nov 19, the West China Metropolitan News reported Tuesday.
Eight Chinese businesses have launched on Deutsche Börse (German Board) this year, adding the total to 25, China Business News reported Wednesday.
The Chinese government is considering an environmental tax, and also discussing a tax on carbon emissions, Cri.com reported Wednesday, citing an official.
Chongqing is adding thousands of surveillance cameras within the municipal districts as part of local authorities' move to strengthen the public security system.
Shanghai General Motors Co Ltd's auto sales may reach 1.02 million units -- a new high -- this year, China Business News reported Monday.
Top researchers from five financial institutions including BOC International Holdings Limited and Minsheng Securities Co said at a forum in Beijing on Sunday they are bullish about China's A-share market in 2011, Shanghai Securities News reported Monday.
The world's largest night-shining jewel, with a diameter of 1.6 meters and a weight of six tons, was shown to the public for the first time in the Palace of Valuable Jade in China's southern Hainan province, chinanews.com reported Sunday.
Some 80 percent of graduate students said in a survey they will give up trying to find jobs in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, first-tier cities in China that have been considered dream places for many, because of the untouchable home prices and high living costs.