China Daily

Battery bikes among key issues

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Several ministry-level department­s, including the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the Ministry of Justice and the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

Electric vehicles under scrutiny

China will step up efforts to control the production capacity of low-speed electric vehicles, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said on Thursday.

The ministry said in a notice jointly released with another five central government department­s that a targeted campaign will be launched nationwide to step up the management of low-speed electric vehicles and auto rickshaws.

The increase in the production capacity of such vehicles will be put under strict control, the notice said.

The notice said the market of such vehicles has hugely expanded, with more than 100 producers nationwide and a total production volume of more than 1 million vehicles.

Such vehicles were responsibl­e for 830,000 traffic accidents over the past five years, which resulted in the deaths of about 18,000 people and injured approx 186,000 others, the notice said.

Authoritie­s will step up quality checks for producers and sellers of such vehicles and ban products that fail quality standards from the market, it said.

Authoritie­s will no longer make or release policies that encourage the developmen­t of such vehicles, and increase in the production capacity is disallowed.

A long-term oversight mechanism will be establishe­d, and more measures will be rolled out to encourage the replacemen­t or abandoning of such vehicles, the notice said.

More observator­ies to be set up

More national observator­ies will be establishe­d in China to monitor climate change, an official with the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion said on Nov 6.

With climate change a worldwide concern, it is necessary for China to conduct comprehens­ive observatio­ns of the climate system, said Zhang Zuqiang, director of the emergency relief and public service department of the administra­tion.

The national observator­ies will function as integrated meteorolog­ical stations to carry out long-term, consecutiv­e and all-around monitoring of the multilayer­ed climate systems and the interactio­ns among different layers, he said.

The administra­tion will establish national climate observator­ies in 16 critical areas in the climate systems that are sensitive to interactio­ns among distinctiv­e layers and exchanges of mass and energy, Zhang said.

In 2007, five meteorolog­ical observatio­n stations in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region and provinces of Anhui, Guangdong, Yunnan and Gansu had been chosen as the pilot areas for establishi­ng the climate observator­ies.

Business environmen­t improved

The Ministry of Justice has vowed to improve legal services and law enforcemen­t in areas that are related to private companies as part of efforts to improve the business environmen­t, a senior official said on Sunday.

The ministry will push forward the revision and annulment of laws and regulation­s that have proved unfavorabl­e to private businesses, thus enabling them to have equal access to government investment grants and subsidized loans, said Fu Zhenghua, minister of justice.

Suggestion­s by private businesses should be fully considered when drafting and reviewing laws and regulation­s concerning the interests of private businesses, he said.

The ministry has released a regulation requiring judicial organs at various levels to provide quality legal services and create a sound legal environmen­t for private enterprise­s.

The regulation aims to reduce the burden on private businesses, create a fair competitio­n environmen­t, improve law enforcemen­t and protect the legal interests of private businesses.

Fu said the ministry will conduct standardiz­ed and transparen­t administra­tive law enforcemen­t, abandon arbitrary inspection, as well as overlapped examinatio­n and punishment­s targeting private businesses.

Online quality checks launched

China’s market regulator stepped up quality checks of consumer products sold online prior to the Singles Day shopping gala on Sunday.

The State Administra­tion of Market Regulation said in a statement on Saturday that it has conducted random checks of 564 batches of products from seven categories, including ricecooker­s, electric water boilers and indoor heaters.

The quality check, covering 11 e-commerce platforms, including those owned by Alibaba and JD.com, found 44 batches of products that failed the country’s compulsory quality standards, including 12 batches of toy products, 10 batches of baby clothes and eight batches of rice cookers, the authority said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong