Corporation NEW CHINA VENTURES Ltd partners unit price shareholders public company USA listed NASDAQ stock market symbol:NCVL HOW WTO MEMBERSHIP AFFECTS CHINA WTO membership will inextricably link China to the global economic community, eventually bringing with it more employment & investment opportunities, Investing in China - The Emerging Venture Capital Market, investment in mainland China start-up company. Until about 20 years ago, water usage was free. When China began charging for water in 1985, rates were abysmally low, at around Rmb0.05/cm, as Beijing treated water as a public good. But since the late 1990s, there have been many rounds of water fee increases. The average water rate of the 36 major cities today is Rmb2.08 cm, according to the National Development and Research Commission Research, which also said that the average rate rise in the past three years was 10%. China’s average rate is ironically cheaper than the US$0.40 that Canada charges its users although the latter has the highest water per capita in the world. (In parts of northern China such as Beijing, however, where water resources are scarce, the tariffs are in the Rmb4-5 range.)
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USA Public Listed Company. New China Ventures Ltd. (NCVL)
A Strategic Investment in Mainland China Water Industry
B16L, Cheng Ming Building
No. 2 Xi Zhi Men South Street,
Xicheng Dist., Beijing, China -100035
Phone: 011 86 536 2958418
Email: info@china-waterworks.com
Chinese water utilities investments,USA listed company
NEW CHINA VENTURES Ltd Meter installation. Hydrologists worldwide believe that household metering helps to cut water consumption, particularly if consumers are educated about the importance of water conservation. China is moving – although slowly – in that direction, by adopting a “one household, one meter” policy. Until recently, households generally shared their metres, which were mostly mechanical ones. Mechanical meters are unreliable in monitoring dripping water, troublesome in data collection, and inconvenient for water fee collection. This makes it difficult to track water leakage – a term which refers to physical leakage of water as well as under-payment or non-payment of water bills. THE COST OF CHINA’S WATER SHORTAGE There are three potential ramifications to Beijing’s failure to tackle the water problem – economic, health and political – the most costly of which will be the political threat to the Chinese Communist Party.
CHINA CLIMATE

     China lies mainly in the northern temperate zone under the influence of monsoons. From September & October to March & April monsoons blow from Siberia and the Mongolia Plateau into China & decrease in force as it goes southward, causing dry and cold winter in the country & a temperature difference of 40 degree centigrade between the north and south. The temperature in China in the winter is 5 to 18 degree centigrade lower than that in other countries on the same latitude in winter. Monsoons blow into China from the ocean in summer, bringing with them warm and wet currents & rain.

     Great differences in climate are found from region to region owing to China's extensive territory & complex topography. The northern part of Heilongjiang Province in northeast China has no summer, Hainan Island has a long summer but no winter; the Huaihe River valley features four distinct seasons; the western part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is covered by snow all year round; the southern part of the Yunan-Guizhou Plateau is spring-like all the year; and the northwestern inland region sees a great drop of temperature in the day. Annual precipitation also varies greatly from region to region; it is as high as 1,500 millimeters along the southeastern coast. Decreasing landward, it is less than 50 millimeters in northwest China. Please click here for current weather report & weather forecast for major Chinese cities.

CHINA GEOGRAPHY

     China is situated in eastern Asia, bounded by the Pacific in the east. The third largest country in the world, next to Canada and Russia, it has an area of 9.6 million square kilometers, or one-fifteenth of the world's land mass. It begins from the confluence of the Heilong and Wusuli rivers (135 degrees and 5 minutes east longitude) in the east to the Pamirs west of Wuqia County in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (73 degrees and 40 minutes east longitude) in the west, about 5,200 kilometers apart; and from the midstream of the Heilong River north of Mohe (53 degrees and 31 minutes north latitude) in the north to the southernmost island Zengmu'ansha in the South China Sea (4 degrees and 15 minutes north latitude), about 5,500 kilometers apart.

     The border stretches over 22,000 kilometers on land and the coastline extends well over 18,000 kilometers, washed by the waters of the Bohai, the Huanghai, the East China and the South China seas. The Bohai Sea is the inland sea of China.

     There are 6,536 islands larger than 500 square meters, the largest is Taiwan, with a total area of about 36,000 square kilometers and the second, Hainan. The South China Sea Islands are the southernmost island group of China.

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One of the first critical technological advancements NCVL intends to implement is clean drinking water for chinese people. Economic cost. There are two aspects to the economic cost. One is more straightforward. A research funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology shows that water shortage and its problem cause an average US$35b (Rmb 280b) in direct economic losses each year, twice that caused by floods. Less straightforward is the likelihood that China’s water demand will reach the supply limits, which will make its rapid GDP growth unsustainable. Health cost and bird flu. The Ministry of Health has acknowledged that environmental pollution – of which water pollution is a big part – is behind a 25% increase in birth defects nationwide since 2001. More than 30,000 children die each year from diarrhoea caused by contaminated water. China also has the highest liver and cancer death rates in the world – again, no thanks in part to water pollution. (“Cancer villages” have sprouted up in places where the water pollution is very bad in some small towns in Guangdong.) The shortage of water for livestock creates the threat of diseases, as they take in all sorts of pollutants and wastes. Diseases could be transmitted from birds to pigs and to people. The world is now facing the risk of a bird flu pandemic, a risk taken seriously by the World Health Organisation as the human toll continues to rise, especially in developing countries