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BEIJING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- Shanghai Pudong Development (SPD) Bank said its first-half-year net profit rose 33.92 percent from one year earlier due largely to lending boom and increased commission fees.Net profits climbed to 9.08 billion yuan (1.34 billion U.S. dollars) in the first six months of this year, the Shanghai-based lender said in a statement filed with the Shanghai Stock Exchange late Sunday.Its growth in profits stemmed from rising operating revenues, a result of growing net interest earnings, increased fee incomes and the improved quality of assets, according to the statement.Earnings per share stood at 0.791 yuan, up 20.21 percent from one year earlier. Also, operating revenues grew 36.42 percent to 22.75 billion yuan in the first half of 2010, it said.Total assets for the commercial bank hit 1.781 trillion yuan by the end of June, up 9.77 percent from the end of 2009.
PYONGYANG, Oct. 24 (Xinhua) -- A delegation of senior Chinese military officers led by Guo Boxiong, vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission held on Sunday a memorial ceremony for Chinese People's Volunteers (CPV) martyrs in Hoechang County, South Phyongan Province.Wreaths in the name of leaders of the Communist Party of China and Chinese government as well as the visiting delegation were laid in front of the cemetery for the CPV martyrs.A wreath signed jointly by the Worker's Party of Korea (WPK) Central Committee, the Presidium of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) Supreme People's Assembly and the DPRK cabinet was also laid to mourn the fallen CPV martyrs.Guo Boxiong (L Front), vice chairman of China's Central Military Commission, addresses a memorial service at the martyrs cemetery of the Chinese People's Volunteers (CPV) in Hoechang County of South Phyongan Province, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), Oct. 24, 2010.Addressing the memorial ceremony, Guo said that 60 years ago the CPV crossed the Yalu River to support the DPRK people to fight the imperialist invasion and safeguard justice and peace and won a great historic victory.During the tough war, the Chinese volunteers sacrificed themselves and demonstrated the great internationalism and they forged, with their blood, the unbreakable China-DPRK friendship, Guo said.Many of the volunteers died in the DPRK, and they represent the best of China's fine sons and daughters, and their names will go down in history, Guo said.Thanks to the close care by DPRK's late top leader Kim Il Sung and the direct guidance of General Secretary Kim Jong Il, the bodies of the CPV martyrs were buried properly and the cemetery has been under careful maintenance, he added.

XICHANG, Sichuan, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- Preparations for China's second unmanned lunar probe, Chang'e II, are almost complete at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center (XSLC) in southwest China, and the satellite is ready for a Friday launch, based on satisfactory weather forecasts.Weather will be the only question for Friday as the rocket's first and second stage boosters were fueled with conventional propellants Thursday, said authorities with the XSLC.Li Shangfu, Chief Director of the XSLC, said the center's Thursday weather forecast for Oct. 1, the first launch window, predicted light rain and very limited chances that thunder and lightning would occur from the time of the rocket fueling to an hour after the launch window.Further, the launch is not likely to be influenced by the high-altitude winds and the electric field on the ground, he said.The launch center will hold a meeting at 10:30 a.m. Friday to decide whether to begin the final stage of fueling of the Long March 3C rocket, the last procedure before the launch, based on weather conditions, said Li.Once the fueling of the rocket's third stage booster begins, the launch of the satellite will be "irreversible" and occur in eight hours, he said.With the help of radar and satellites, weather forecasts at the XSLC are 80 to 90 percent accurate for no more than 48 hours, and for weather conditions within four hours they can be over 90 percent accurate, said Jiang Xiaohua, a meteorological expert at the center.The rocket will carry the Chang'e II to a trans-lunar orbit, and then the satellite is expected to take about 112 hours, or nearly five days, to arrive at its lunar orbit for a six-month mission.The lunar probe will test key technologies and collect data for future landings of Chang'e III and Chang'e IV, and provide high-resolution photographs of the landing area.Chang'e II was built as an alternative to Chang'e I, which was launched in October 2007 and maintained a 16-month lunar orbit. The series of Chang'e probes is named after a legendary Chinese moon goddess.
XINING, Sept. 29 (Xinhua) -- Northwest China' s Qinghai on Wednesday became the first province to establish a regulation that holds local governments and state-owned enterprises responsible in coping with climate change.Called Qinghai' s Regulations of Coping with Climate Change, issued by the provincial government Wednesday and scheduled to take effect on Oct. 1, the regulations will cover the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, which has one of the most fragile ecological systems in the world.Energy savings, emissions reductions, water resource conservation and other works related to climate change will be considered when evaluating senior officials of governments and state-owned enterprises administered by Qinghai, the new regulation stipulates."The regulation is a landmark in China' s creation of a legal framework in curbing climate change as it stresses and specifies local government' s responsibility on climate change," said Wang Zhiqiang, head of the policy and law department of the China Meteorological Administration.Governments administrated by Qinghai should build policies in line with the regulation and support green development, said Li Xiaoyu, deputy head of Qinghai' s legislative office."If officials fail to meet their duties in combating climate change, they are subject to punishments stipulated by the regulation," Li added."The regulation, based on China' s laws, regulations and policies, provides a basis for law enforcement and government agencies to implement climate change policies and punish offenders," Wang said."Qinghai' s temperature has been on the rise, reaching record highs this summer, and the trend is still going up," said Wang Shen, deputy head of Qinghai' s Meteorological Bureau.Statistics show Qinghai' s temperature has been rising by 0.35 centigrade every ten years, compared to the world average of 0.13 centigrade.Some mountain ice caps and frozen soil atop the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau are melting, triggering floods, expanding deserts and degrading the ecology.Qinghai is the source of the Yangtze River and the Yellow River, China' s two major rivers. The Mekong, an international river that runs through southern Asia, also begins in the province. Its ecology has attracted extensive concern from home and abroad.China' s state council issued a plan to cope with climate change in 2007.
来源:资阳报