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On today’s show Andrew and Bill begin with the release of treated water from the Fukushima nuclear power facility and the response from PRC authorities, media and consumers. With a ban of an imports of all aquatic products from Japan and additional boycotts proliferating, what measures might be next? And with the IAEA and many governments largely in agreement that Japan’s plan is safe enough, what does this conflict say about Chinese leadership? From there: Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo meets with Party leaders in Beijing, reactions to the early returns from those discussions, and the well-timed launch of a new Huawei phone as the Commerce delegation makes its way through the PRC. At the end: A victory lap for TikTok, memories of high-speed rail, and a few minutes on the most recent measures to stimulate the economy.
Related readings:
Stock market support; Xi in Xinjiang; Real estate; US-PRC Commerce meeting; New Xi Thought book -- Sinocism
Mortgage rate cuts; Raimondo meets Li Qiang; Huawei launches 5G phone early; Putin to China -- Sinocism
Fukushima: Discharge from Japan nuclear plant safe, tests show -- BBC
Chinese consumers punish Japan over Fukushima nuclear water release -- Washington Post
Anti-Japanese Feeling Rises in China After Fukushima Water Discharge -- WSJ
China says its ban on Japanese seafood is about safety. Is it really? -- CNN
U.S. Does Not Want to ‘Decouple’ From China, Commerce Chief Says -- N.Y. Times
Huawei surprises with presales of its latest Mate handset, as it seeks to revive smartphone unit following US sanctions -- SCMP
Huawei Building Secret Network for Chips, Trade Group Warns -- Bloomberg
TikTok’s U.S. Future Still in Limbo as Commerce Secretary Visits China -- N.Y. Times
U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo meets with China Premier Li Qiang -- CNBC
Communist Party Priorities Complicate Plans to Revive China’s Economy -- WSJ
To add the Sharp China feed to your preferred podcast player:
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The “email link” in the pulldown shown above will send you an email that also makes it easy to set it up in your preferred podcast app on your phone.
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Thanks for listening.
On today’s show Andrew and Bill begin with the release of treated water from the Fukushima nuclear power facility and the response from PRC authorities, media and consumers. With a ban of an imports of all aquatic products from Japan and additional boycotts proliferating, what measures might be next? And with the IAEA and many governments largely in agreement that Japan’s plan is safe enough, what does this conflict say about Chinese leadership? From there: Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo meets with Party leaders in Beijing, reactions to the early returns from those discussions, and the well-timed launch of a new Huawei phone as the Commerce delegation makes its way through the PRC. At the end: A victory lap for TikTok, memories of high-speed rail, and a few minutes on the most recent measures to stimulate the economy.
Related readings:
Stock market support; Xi in Xinjiang; Real estate; US-PRC Commerce meeting; New Xi Thought book -- Sinocism
Mortgage rate cuts; Raimondo meets Li Qiang; Huawei launches 5G phone early; Putin to China -- Sinocism
Fukushima: Discharge from Japan nuclear plant safe, tests show -- BBC
Chinese consumers punish Japan over Fukushima nuclear water release -- Washington Post
Anti-Japanese Feeling Rises in China After Fukushima Water Discharge -- WSJ
China says its ban on Japanese seafood is about safety. Is it really? -- CNN
U.S. Does Not Want to ‘Decouple’ From China, Commerce Chief Says -- N.Y. Times
Huawei surprises with presales of its latest Mate handset, as it seeks to revive smartphone unit following US sanctions -- SCMP
Huawei Building Secret Network for Chips, Trade Group Warns -- Bloomberg
TikTok’s U.S. Future Still in Limbo as Commerce Secretary Visits China -- N.Y. Times
U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo meets with China Premier Li Qiang -- CNBC
Communist Party Priorities Complicate Plans to Revive China’s Economy -- WSJ
To add the Sharp China feed to your preferred podcast player:
Click on the "listen on" button and you will see a dropdown with several options. Make sure you are logged into your account when you do it so you get the correct private RSS feed for subscribers. If you have not logged in for a while you can enter your email and then we will send you a link login link.
The “email link” in the pulldown shown above will send you an email that also makes it easy to set it up in your preferred podcast app on your phone.
If you use the Substack app it has a built- in podcast player.
Thanks for listening.