Saturday, January 5, 2008

Flour ban could see stocks running out within a month



Importer warns mainland action may be disastrous


One of the largest flour suppliers in Hong Kong is rejecting orders from new customers, and estimates its stock could last no more than one month in light of a mainland ban on flour exports meant to stabilise domestic supply.

The warning came after the Ministry of Commerce introduced a new quota and permit policy this month on wheat, corn and rice flour exports.

The customs authority imposed the ban, although details of the policy are still being worked out.

A ministry official would not say yesterday when the ban would be lifted, but the Commerce and Economic Development Bureau said it was in close contact with mainland authorities on the ban.

"We hope the exports can be resumed as quickly as possible," a bureau spokeswoman said.

The policy change has not just further stretched flour supplies but also might further increase the price after a tax of 5 per cent to 25 per cent on 57 types of grain products, including flour, was earlier imposed by the Ministry of Finance.

The Shiwo Trading Company, one of the largest suppliers of flour from the mainland and Japan, made the one-month estimate on its supply and said it would be disastrous if the ban was not lifted by then.

"We have rejected new customers, and we might not accept extra orders from existing ones," the firm's managing director, Leung Yiu-kam, said.

"I have also heard that other suppliers already have been having difficulty meeting demand."

While the company pledged not to raise prices, Mr Leung said food producers relying on low-quality mainland flour would suffer much more than others using more reliable Japanese flour, even though it cost 50 per cent to 80 per cent more.

Of the more than 156,000 tonnes of wheat imported in the first 10 months of last year, about 61 per cent came from the mainland and 28 per cent from Japan. Mainland flour is priced at between HK$100 and HK$120 per 22kg bag.

Lam Soon, the largest flour importer, said supplies to its customers remained normal but did not say how long stocks would last and whether it had adjusted its price.

Winner Food Products, a local instant noodle producer, and Garden, the dominant bakery products supplier, said their production had not been affected because they had a diversified source of flour. The price of noodles, however, had already increased.

Maxim's Caterers also said it was reviewing prices for its bakery products due to a surge in prices of other ingredients. Taipan bakery said yesterday that although it was using Japanese flour, it had experienced a 40 per cent rise in the costs of other raw materials, which forced it to raise bread prices by up to HK$1.

A spokesman for Tai Cheong Bakery, known for its egg tarts, said that although the flour supply had been stable so far, "we can't stock up too much flour as it will become damp if kept too long. We have to order [a new supply] every day to replenish the stock".

SCMP Jan 5, 2008

Friday, January 4, 2008

After saying "hello", do you know how to make conversation to another person?


I think most of you have difficulty in spoken English. Apart from saying "Hello" or "Good morning", you have no idea on how to carry on with the conversation. Today, I'll introduce you a BBC podcast telling you all sorts of "How to...". The aim of this podcast is to help you learn and practise useful English language for everyday situations. I hope you enjoy the podcast.

Link to the site.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

This is NOT a booklet

LG.Philips announces 14.3-inch flexible e-paper display



Try to contain yourself when we rattle off the following list of specs for LG.Philips's latest A4 sheet of flexible e-paper: 14.3-inches, 1280 x 800 pixels, 16.7m colors, 300 micrometers thick, full 180° viewing angle. It'll be at CES, but apparently only for Korean models to hold and love. The rest of us? Not so lucky, not even by a long shot.

Engadget

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Students show little interest in politics




Local secondary school students have shown political indifference, with none of last year's political news stories featuring in a top 10 list voted on by the teenagers.

The tragedy in which a mentally ill mother threw her children out of a window before jumping to her own death in Tin Shui Wai topped the students' list of the top 10 news stories.

Last month, more than 80,000 students from 110 schools were invited to vote for news stories they considered important in 2007.

The cabin that plunged from the Lantau cable-car system at Ngong Ping came second, followed by the rail merger in December.

News stories focusing on the battle between Chief Executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen and legislator Alan Leong Ka-kit in the chief executive election in March ended up in 11th place, while the tussle between political heavyweights Anson Chan Fang On-sang and Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee in the Legislative Council by-election on Hong Kong Island last month took 12th place.

Eric Ng Hok-tung, member of the Hok Yau Club which organised the poll, said students seemed to be more concerned about social issues than political news.

"Students might feel that politics is not something that is directly related to them, as they do not have the right to vote for the chief executive or legislators," he said.

Legislator Cheung Man-kwong said: "The secondary students tend to care about things happening around them or relating to them."

He suggested more civic education could help to improve students' political awareness.

The top 10

  1. Tin Shui Wai family tragedy 49,619
  2. Ngong Ping 360 saga 45,872
  3. MTR/KCR merger 43,585
  4. Demolition of Queen's Pier 43,259
  5. 12 years of free education 41,522
  6. Virginia Tech massacre 38,017
  7. Child prodigies March Boedihardjo and Ho Hoi-lam 37,295
  8. Bar benders' strike 35,373
  9. Chinese University Student Press in trouble for sex survey 34,153
  10. Tips from private tutorial school on Chinese composition in HK Certificate of Education Examination 33,347
SCMP, Jan 2, 2008

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Happy 2008

Dear 6AB1 students,

2008 has arrived. What's your New Year's resolution? Have you made up your mind to (or not to) do something starting 2008? You can share with me tomorrow morning (if you are not too busy doing homework).

Best regards,
Mr. Fu

Monday, December 31, 2007

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Be patient! You just have to wait 10 more years.



Beijing rules out universal suffrage in 2012, but not against it for chief executive in 2017


China's top legislature has put an end to 20 years of contention over democratising Hong Kong by giving the green light to universal suffrage for the election of the city's chief executive in 2017 and of the Legislative Council thereafter.

Chief Executive Donald Tsang Yam-kuen praised the decision as a "most important step for Hong Kong's constitutional development" and said a "clear timetable" had effectively been set for returning all lawmakers by universal suffrage in 2020.

The decision, in response to a report submitted by the chief executive two weeks ago, was passed unanimously by the National People's Congress Standing Committee in Beijing yesterday at the end of a week-long meeting.

It left to Hong Kong the details of electoral arrangements - including "appropriate amendments" for polls in 2012, which the committee's deputy secretary general saw as a key step to achieving universal suffrage. But as expected, the committee said it was too early to change the 50:50 ratio of directly elected and functional constituency seats in Legco.

Pan-democrats expressed regret about the rejection of universal suffrage in 2012 but said they would continue to fight for the early introduction of full democracy. They warned about "fake universal suffrage" being promised given that details of the 2017 and 2020 polls are not settled.

When the Standing Committee met in 2004, it ruled out universal suffrage in 2007 and 2008 because of the city's short history of democratic elections. Yesterday, explaining the rationale for the committee's decision, its deputy secretary general, Qiao Xiaoyang , said that by 2017, "quite a number of elections for the chief executive and the Legislative Council will have been held" and therefore the direct election of the chief executive at that time "is consistent with the [Basic Law] principle of gradual and orderly progress and in keeping with the actual situation in Hong Kong".

Mr Tsang said: "The timetable for attaining universal suffrage has been set. Hong Kong is entering a most important chapter in its constitutional history. We should all try to apply fresh thinking to secure implementation of universal suffrage for the chief executive first, in 2017, to be followed by that for the Legislative Council in 2020."

Mr Qiao also said the earliest date for returning all Legco members by universal suffrage would be 2020.

He had a clear warning for pan-democrats. The decision announced yesterday was that of the highest state legislature and must be carried out, Mr Qiao said.

"If people still stand firm on dual universal suffrage by 2012, it will be difficult to continue a platform of communication ... if their demands are way over the top, people will only question what they really want."

Pan-democrats held a protest march from the Legco building to the Convention and Exhibition Centre - where Mr Qiao briefed local NPC deputies and Beijing advisers about the committee's decision - and to Government House, where Mr Qiao briefed lawmakers.

Speaking after that meeting, new lawmaker Anson Chan Fang On-sang did not think a clear timetable had been set. If universal suffrage reform could not be implemented for the election of the chief executive in 2017, direct election of the legislature would be further delayed, she said.

She also expressed concern that Mr Qiao appeared to have expressed a desire for functional constituencies to be retained, which Mrs Chan said would not be in keeping with international standards. She urged Mr Tsang to make a clear statement on the future of the seats for trades and professions.

In a separate briefing, Li Fei, vice-chairman of the NPC Legislative Affairs Commission, addressed a key concern raised by the pan-democrats - that Beijing might go back on the statement that electing the chief executive by universal suffrage in 2017 was possible. The decision was legally binding, Mr Li said.

Xinhua quoted the NPC Standing Committee chairman Wu Bangguo as saying the decision was "far-reaching for long-term prosperity and stability in Hong Kong".

Executive Councillor Tsang Yok-sing, of the Beijing-friendly Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong, said President Hu Jintao had personally taken up the committee's decision, reflecting the importance the central government placed on the issue of universal suffrage in Hong Kong.

SCMP (Dec 30, 2007)