LONDON WALLET
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Business Finance
  • Markets
  • Industries
  • Opinion
  • UK
  • Real Estate
  • Crypto
No Result
View All Result
LONDON WALLET
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Business Finance
  • Markets
  • Industries
  • Opinion
  • UK
  • Real Estate
  • Crypto
No Result
View All Result
LondonWallet
No Result
View All Result

Top China official urges more secrecy in the country’s energy sector

Robert Frost by Robert Frost
August 17, 2023
in Industries
Top China official urges more secrecy in the country’s energy sector
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


SHENZHEN, CHINA – MARCH 09: View of high commercial and residential buildings on March 9, 2016 in Shenzhen, China. General economic slowdown continues in China while the property price and stock bubble faces risk. (Photo by Zhong Zhi/Getty Images)

Zhong Zhi | Getty Images News | Getty Images

A lead China official called for tighter secrecy in the energy sector to protect national interests against hostile foreign forces, echoing a broader crackdown impacting the country’s investment landscape.

“It is necessary to increase propaganda around ensuring confidentiality, give full play to the traditions of confidentiality in nuclear, petroleum and other energy industries, organize and hold various activities, actively foster a culture of protecting secrets and extreme discretion,” Zhang Jianhua, the director of China’s National Energy Administration, said in comments published on the agency’s website on Wednesday translated by CNBC.

Zhang urged the steps — which include preventing the leaks of key technologies in the energy sector — while citing the priority of national interests in the face of a “hostile” international landscape.

“The energy transition has some contradictions and difficulties — these very often are the focus of foreign hostile forces that want to steal and attack. They are fixed on our country’s energy sector, have increased collection of all kinds of data and information, in order to distort and slander China’s energy strategic planning, transformation, development, and other work, and interfere and influence our hard-won secure and stabile environment,” he said, without disclosing the names or nature of these forces.

China’s influential status as the world’s largest energy consumer has proven a double-edged blade. Zhang warns one must be “soberly aware” that his country depends on foreign oil and natural gas for up to 70% and more than 40% of its requirements, respectively. He reiterated Beijing’s oft-stated aims to increase self-sufficiency in energy — a target that analysts at Goldman Sachs in March believed China is on track to reach by 2060, if it continues its renewable investments and advances in wind turbines, solar panels and hydrogen as planned.

In turn, global suppliers depend on China’s active fossil fuel purchases and were struck — especially in the oil sector — by Beijing’s slower-than-anticipated economic revival, following the removal of spartan Covid-19 restrictions since the start of the year.

China’s high consumption has also bolstered its carbon dioxide emissions, Zhang says, against the backdrop of Beijing’s pledge to decarbonize by 2060.

“The task of promoting carbon peak carbon neutrality is arduous,” he warned.

Security vulnerability

National security has been a focal pillar of the Beijing administration since President Xi Jinping stepped into power. Critically, China in April passed a sweeping revision to its espionage law that prohibits the transfer of any information related to national security, broadens the definition of spying and gives expanded powers to authorities carrying out espionage investigations.

The crackdown and its potential for abuse and arbitrary enforcement have raised concerns in the investing community.

“Beijing views inadequate government control of information within China and its outbound flow as a national security risk,” the U.S. National Counterintelligence and Security Center said in a note in June.

“These laws provide the PRC government with expanded legal grounds for accessing and controlling data held by U.S. firms in China. U.S. companies and individuals in China could also face penalties for traditional business activities that Beijing deems acts of espionage or for actions that Beijing believes assist foreign sanctions against China. The laws may also compel locally-employed PRC nationals of U.S. firms to assist in PRC intelligence efforts.”

Beijing and the U.S. have sustained an intensifying diplomatic and trade rivalry that culminated in Washington’s accusations of espionage in February, after a Chinese high-altitude balloon floated over the United States. The White House has pursued a strategy of de-risking and diminishing its commercial dependencies on China, with President Joe Biden last week signing an executive order to regulate U.S. investments that support China’s development of sensitive technologies.

Washington on Wednesday once more signaled concerns over Beijing’s political opacity.

“As we’ve said many times before, there have also been transparency issues, as we know, when it comes to — when it comes to the PRC and on the economic data, specifically,” U.S. Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a press briefing.

— CNBC’s Evelyn Cheng contributed to this report.



Source link

You might also like

Clear skies ahead – Delta partners with Maeve on M80 hybrid regional aircraft

Hear me out: instead of faster chargers, we should lobby for SLOWER gas pumps

John Deere adds new, updated Gator GX and GX Crew electric UTVs for 2026

Share30Tweet19
Previous Post

Here are Thursday’s biggest analyst calls: Apple, Amazon, Nvidia, Adobe, Pinterest, TJX, SoFi & more

Next Post

Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Walmart, Adobe, Cisco, Hawaiian Electric and more

Robert Frost

Robert Frost

Jutawantoto Jutawantoto Jutawantoto Jutawantoto Berita Terbaru Hari

Recommended For You

Clear skies ahead – Delta partners with Maeve on M80 hybrid regional aircraft
Industries

Clear skies ahead – Delta partners with Maeve on M80 hybrid regional aircraft

October 12, 2025
Hear me out: instead of faster chargers, we should lobby for SLOWER gas pumps
Industries

Hear me out: instead of faster chargers, we should lobby for SLOWER gas pumps

October 12, 2025
John Deere adds new, updated Gator GX and GX Crew electric UTVs for 2026
Industries

John Deere adds new, updated Gator GX and GX Crew electric UTVs for 2026

October 12, 2025
GM hydrogen: the reports of my death are greatly exaggerated
Industries

GM hydrogen: the reports of my death are greatly exaggerated

October 11, 2025
Next Post
Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Walmart, Adobe, Cisco, Hawaiian Electric and more

Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Walmart, Adobe, Cisco, Hawaiian Electric and more

Related News

Meet JUXTA Nomad – a portable, autonomous mini mart you may see at EV charging stations soon

Meet JUXTA Nomad – a portable, autonomous mini mart you may see at EV charging stations soon

October 4, 2023
More than 5,000 have died in Turkey which could rise to over 20,000 as two more earthquakes strike with further powerful tremors – London Business News | London Wallet

More than 5,000 have died in Turkey which could rise to over 20,000 as two more earthquakes strike with further powerful tremors – London Business News | London Wallet

February 7, 2023
Securitize adds Wormhole for multi-chain RWA tokens 

Securitize adds Wormhole for multi-chain RWA tokens 

September 20, 2024

Browse by Category

  • Business Finance
  • Crypto
  • Industries
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Opinion
  • Real Estate
  • UK

London Wallet

Read latest news about finance, business and investing

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2025 London Wallet - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Checkout
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Login/Register
  • My account
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2025 London Wallet - All Rights Reserved!

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?