The nuclear crisis in Japan may slow down China's feverish pace of expansion in the nuclear power sector and is likely to encourage the government to lift standards for newly-built plants, said Ni Weidou, a senior academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering.
Nuclear leakage in Japan triggered hikes in the solar and wind energy sectors on the domestic secondary stock market Wednesday.
PetroChina Company Limited (PetroChina), China's largest oil and gas producer, reported Thursday that its net profit for 2010 surged 35.4 percent from a year ago.
Hilong Holdings, a Chinese oil equipment manufacturer, has decided to postpone its Hong Kong IPO of up to HK$1.48 billion ($190 million) due to difficult market conditions, IFR reported on Thursday.
Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co Ltd, a manufacturer of wind turbines, expects to reap benefits when Chinese independent power producers (IPPs) gain exposure to the growth in wind power in the domestic and overseas markets.
China National Nuclear Corp (CNNC), the nation's largest atomic plant operator, may issue a record amount of bonds to finance expansion, even as Japan battles to prevent a reactor meltdown, according to its top official.
China will suspend approval of new nuclear power stations and assess all nuclear projects, including those under construction, in the wake of the Japan crisis, the State Council said on Wednesday.
The charging network for electric vehicles (EVs) has been expanded to cover all 18 districts in Hong Kong, said Hong Kong's Financial Secretary at an EV publicity event Tuesday.
In a span of five years, China increased its municipal wastewater treatment rate by 24 percentage points to 75 percent by the end of 2010, according to official data released Tuesday.
The turmoil in Libya will not affect Chinese oil firms' investment in Africa, and the decreasing asset valuation in the region may instead open up buying opportunities for domestic companies, Citigroup said on Tuesday.
China's power consumption in February rose 15.82 percent from a year earlier to 313.6 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), the National Energy Administration (NEA) said on Tuesday.
PetroChina Co, the listed unit of the nation's biggest energy company, posted a "very good" performance in the first two months of this year, said Chairman Jiang Jiemin.