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Chinese rises to be Japan's biggest trade partner in 2006
China produces 46 mln tons of crude oil,495 mln tons of raw coal
New Zealand, China expand air services
Report predicts China's GDP grow rate to reach 10.9% in 2007
World's automakers hustle for position in China
Chinese economic growth jumps 11.1 percent in Q1
carve out  
BMW woos Chinese support for hydrogen
Record numbers crowd into Shanghai Auto Show
McKinsey: Consumers will be new powerhouse of Chinese economy
Report: China to import half of gas demand by 2020
Biggest Japanese retailer to open Beijing store
Shanghai Auto Show to highlight fuel-efficient cars
Industry  
Mainland stocks climb to record for a 2nd day
Stocks post biggest two-day gain in 2 years
Construction of China-Myanmar oil pipeline expected to start this year
Stocks rebound as healthy earnings reports trickle in
Yuan hits new high against U.S. dollar
Sanctions on Chinese paper may lead to other cases
 
Foreign automakers to provide free labor conditions training
SHANGHAI, Apr. 25 (AP) -- General Motors, Ford and DaimlerChrysler announced Wednesday they will provide training for their suppliers in China on how to keep their working conditions safe, health and legal.


The plan has the backing of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, a government-supported industry group, the three automakers said in an announcement.


General Motors Corp. has more than 20,000 employees in China and relies on suppliers employing thousands more. Ford Motor Co. and German-American automaker DaimlerChrysler AG similarly have many suppliers based in China.


Senior executives of the three automakers were in China's commercial capital for the weeklong 2007 Shanghai Auto Show, which ends on Saturday.


The automakers will use training designed by the Automotive Industry Action Group aimed at educating suppliers about Chinese labor laws and improving compliance with safe working standards, the statement said.


"The single most important resource at any of our member companies is people," J. Scot Sharland, the action group's executive director, said in the statement. "Given the tremendous growth of North American investment in the developing Chinese automotive supply chain, it is imperative that these companies are cognizant of local labor laws and fundamentally understand that Ford, GM and DaimlerChrysler expect 100 percent compliance."


The training is due to begin by the middle of 2007, it said.


The statement cited an unnamed official from the Chinese automotive industry group noting the need for companies to abide by domestic labor laws.


Multinational companies operating or sourcing in China are under intensifying scrutiny for labor conditions at their factories and those of their suppliers. Meanwhile, China has been urging foreign-invested companies to let employees join the government-sanctioned labor federation.


The Automotive Industry Action Group was set up in 1982 to handle industry-related issues such as cost reduction, product quality, health, safety and the environment. It has more than 1,500 member companies in North America, Europe and the Asia-Pacific.


The group said it is also beginning training sessions in Mexico in mid-2007.

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