Angang Steel, one of the mainland's major steelmakers, expects to increase its product prices by more than 10 percent in the second quarter to offset the surge in raw material costs. Rising iron ore costs and fuel prices hurt Angang's pr ... ...full story at People's Daily
from People's Daily on Thu, Apr 17 2008
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| 04 Feb 08 |
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Chinese Food Prices Rising from Snow »
YouTube video Rising food prices due to heavy snow in China give farmers extra money and consumers an added burden.
CHAN:
For most Chinese people, at least in cities, the recent surge in food prices has been less than appealing. But here at one of the country's... |
| 21 Nov 07 |
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Baosteel prices set to be raised next year » People's Daily SHANGHAI: Baoshan Iron & Steel Co, China's largest steelmaker, said yesterday it would raise steel product prices from the first quarter of 2008 because of rising demand and raw material costs. According to the company's statement releas ... |
| 26 Feb 08 |
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Steelmaker ups prices by 20% » People's Daily SHANGHAI: The nation's largest steelmaker Baoshan Iron & Steel Co yesterday raised product prices by up to 20 percent for the second quarter on higher raw material costs and a projected increase in domestic demand. The higher-than-expect ... |
| 28 Mar 08 |
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China raises minimum purchasing prices of rice, wheat to offset rising costs for farmers » People's Daily China raised its minimum purchasing prices of rice and wheat, the second such move this year to spur grain production and offset rising costs for farmers, the State Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said on Friday. The first ... |
| 31 Mar 08 |
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Experts say steel prices to stay high this year » People's Daily China's steel prices will continue to stay high this year, pushed up by booming demand and rising costs, say domestic industry experts. Steel prices still had room to expand, and the per-ton price would break the 1,000-U.S.-dollar t ... |
| 03 Jul 09 |
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Chinese Government Raises Fuel Prices by 10% (That's Good!) » TreeHugger Those prices are in Yuans per liter, I think. Fuel Subsidies Punish Virtue The Chinese government has recently decided to raise fuel prices by about 10%, the third increase in the past few months, following a 6-7% increase on June 1st, and a 3-5%... |