Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Exporter
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
China financial futures exchange set up in Shanghai
Apple's iMac feels the need for speed
China Life to go listed in A-share market following ICBC
China tightens land supply to curb economic overheating
Textile export profits to shrink as yuan appreciates
Challenges latent in China's rosy trade prospect
carve out  
Instant noodles use up one-tenth of China's wheat crop
Microsoft designs a school system
One trillion yuan spent on western infrastructure
ICBC to raise up to US$19 billion in possible record-setting IPO
Hong Kong Disneyland falls short of 5.6 million visitor target
China eyes coalmine killer gas for new energy source
Resources  
China's exchange rate policies not the reason for trading imbalances
Armitage admits leaking Plame's identity
China ranks 4th reformer on ease of doing business index
Yuan's value against U.S. dollar breaks 7.95
China's overseas investment in 2005 hits new high
Futures trading volume in China up by 39% in August
 
ASEAN hopes Singapore-China rail link will be ready by 2015
KUALA LUMPUR, Aug. 26 (AP) -- Southeast Asian nations hope a proposed major railway project linking Singapore to southern China will be ready by 2015 to facilitate the flow of goods and people across the region, officials said Saturday.


The Asian Development Bank has provided Cambodia soft loans of US$40 million (€33 million) to build missing links and another US$5.4 million (€4.5 million) has been secured as grants for the project, said Ong Keng Yong, secretary-general of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.


But overall progress for the rail line spanning 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles) from Singapore to the Chinese city of Kunming has been hindered by a lack of funds and other technical issues relating to building connecting rails to link it to major towns across the region, he said.


"The work is being done on a national level to join up with the rail link but we need more funding," Ong told reporters after a meeting of the ASEAN-Mekong Basin Development Cooperation.


Senior officials will meet in November in Kunming to review the project and identify new sources of funds, he said. The group did not set any target date for completion but "we must have some connection" by the time the bloc fuse into an ASEAN Economic Community by 2015, he added.


Ong didn't say how much the project is worth but trade officials previously estimated it will cost at least 1.8 billion dollars (€1.5 billion). Officials said construction has also been hindered by difficult terrain in some countries, clearing land mines in Cambodia and Laos, and harmonizing customs and immigration.


The railway project is expected to better bind the economies of the region and provide southern China with easier access to ASEAN markets.


ASEAN trade ministers earlier this week agreed to bring forward plans to turn the region into a single market and production base by 2015, five years earlier than originally planned. The bloc also aims to create a free trade zone with China by 2010.


Apart from the rail project, the group also needs funds worth US$44 million (€37 million) for 15 projects involving capacity building, training and other projects to develop the Mekong Basin, said Myanmar Minister for National Planning and Economic Development, U Soe Tha.


To woo new funds, he said membership of the ASEAN-Mekong Basin Development Cooperation _ currently involving only ASEAN and China _ will be opened to interested parties such as the Asian Development Bank and the region's trading partners.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.