logo
Sinopec sets up $690 million hydrogen-energy-focused venture capital fund

Sinopec sets up $690 million hydrogen-energy-focused venture capital fund

Reuters6 days ago

May 29 (Reuters) - China's state oil and gas major Sinopec (600028.SS), opens new tab, has established a venture capital fund focused on hydrogen energy, with an initial size of 5 billion yuan ($690 million), the company said in a statement on Thursday.
The fund, the largest in China dedicated to investment across the hydrogen value chain, will target early-stage investments and incubation of key materials, core equipment and proprietary technologies with high growth potential.
The fund is managed by Sinopec Private Equity Fund Management Co, a wholly owned subsidiary of Sinopec Capital Co. External partners include Shandong New Growth Drivers Fund Management Co and Yantai Guofeng Investment Holding Group Co.
Sinopec has also taken equity stakes in 13 companies involved in the hydrogen energy industry chain and has built 11 hydrogen supply centers for fuel cells and 144 hydrogen refueling stations across China.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media
Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Truth is revealed — How Trump posts to his social site a whopping 17 times a day as he governs by social media

Nearly a decade after his twitchy Twitter fingers helped him shock the world by defeating Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidential election, Donald Trump 's social media habit is playing an even larger role in his messaging and governing during the opening months of his second term. Since returning to the White House on Jan. 20, Trump has taken to the social media site he owns, Truth Social, for a total of 2,145 original posts, which he has used to announce hirings and firings, launch an unprovoked trade war with China (and most of the world), roll out policy changes and threaten friend and foe alike, often with the curt sign-off: 'Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Over his first 100 days, The Independent found he had posted to his site more than 1,600 times, or at least 15 times a day on average through the end of April with the most frequent subject being illegal immigration. A Washington Post review of his Truth Social output that includes his 'retruths' — reposts of content posted by another user on the platform — brings his total to 2,262 posts and reposts starting from the day he was sworn in until this past Sunday. That's more than three times the number of posts to his former favorite platform, Twitter (now known as X), during the same time period in his first term, for an average of 17 posts to his Truth Social account on any given day. Some of his posts are mundane announcements that any of a wide range of Republicans running for offices at every level have received his 'complete and total endorsement' in whatever race they are running. Others, like those marking holidays, have become a genre of their own in which he marks the holiday but then launches into a screed against various enemies, real or perceived. He most recently added to the ranks of this set of posts last week on Memorial Day with a 172-word, all caps rant: 'Happy Memorial Day to all, including the scum that spent the last four years trying to destroy our country through warped radical left minds, who allowed 21,000,000 million people to illegally enter our country, many of them being criminals and the mentally insane.' But it's the reposts that often raise eyebrows as Trump shares content from any of his millions of followers on the Truth Social platform, some of which crosses into the conspiratorially bizarre. In one repost last weekend, he shared a post from a follower who claimed that his successor turned predecessor, former president Joe Biden, had actually been replaced by a 'soulless mindless' robot clone because the real Biden — according to the user — was put to death in 2020. The White House declined to say whether Trump believes Biden, who hosted him at the White House after he won the 2024 election and accompanied him to his swearing-in at the Capitol this past January, was actually a robot clone. Instead, a White House spokesperson, Taylor Rogers, claimed that Trump's social media use makes him 'the most transparent president in history and is meeting the American people where they are to directly communicate his policies, message, and important announcements.' Trump's prolific use of his Truth Social site, on which he boasts more than 10 million followers, theoretically lacks the reach of his previous favorite megaphone on X (formerly Twitter) which can immediately broadcast his missives to 104 million people — approximately 20 million more than the 80 million-plus who followed him when he was banned from the platform in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by a riotous mob of his supporters. Though he was reinstated to the platform after it was acquired by Elon Musk in 2022, he has continued to post first on Truth Social, possibly due to contractual obligations that require him to post to Truth Social before any other platform. In total, his posts to X since returning to the White House number around 100, and those are largely copied from his Truth Social output. According to a White House official who spoke to The Independent on condition of anonymity, Trump's social media posting is still managed in part by Dan Scavino, the longtime aide who has worked for the president since he was hired as the manager of his Westchester, New York golf club in 2008 but first encountered him years before as a golf caddy at another one of his courses. Scavino, who ended Trump's first term as deputy chief of staff for communications, still holds a position as an assistant to the president with the title of deputy White House chief of staff. And he still has access to Trump's Truth Social and other social media accounts. But the days where he was the main author of Trump's posts are over. Now, Scavino works with other loyal staffers, including Natalie Harp, the former right-wing broadcaster who sits close to the Oval Office as one of Trump's closest aides. Trump's been filmed dictating posts to both advisers, but the official stressed that many of Trump's most bombastic posts are from the president's own thumbs, particularly ones that come late at night or early in the morning as he is watching television.

Chinese supermarket shoppers reveal how Donald Trump's brutal tariff move has impacted Aussie beef
Chinese supermarket shoppers reveal how Donald Trump's brutal tariff move has impacted Aussie beef

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Chinese supermarket shoppers reveal how Donald Trump's brutal tariff move has impacted Aussie beef

Supermarkets in China have beefed up on Aussie meat amid tariff tensions between the US and the Asian superpower. Australian beef exports to China have soared in recent months in the wake of US president Donald Trump 's sweeping 'liberation day' tariffs regime earlier in the year. The rival economic superpowers have most recently accused each other of violating a tariff truce struck in Geneva last month. A Chinese woman shared vision of the meat section of her local supermarket, where shelves were filled with Australian beef where US products were previously stocked. She held up a 300g package of grain fed Angus beef as she complimented Australian growers. 'I guess I'm having Australian beef for dinner tonight, instead of American beef,' the woman said in English. 'And, honestly, because of the food quality, I probably trust Australian beef better. 'This box of beef right here is 50 RMB which is about $7 USD [AU$10.82].' @ China ditches American beef and chose Australian beef instead after this tariff war and I'm not complaining 😌🇦🇺🥩 #china #chinese #australia #australian #aussie #usa #america #american #tradewar #tariff #tariffwar #chinatiktok #travelinchina #chinatravel #xiaohongshu #rednote #viral #trend ♬ original sound - The Chinese woman then took a brutal swipe at the US. 'So to answer the question, China ain't hurting,' she said. 'If anything, I think we're probably doing even better because now we have better beef that tastes better and at a better price. 'So thank you Trump for that.' It comes after an American expat echoed similar sentiments when he stumbled across Australian Wagyu beef in a high-end Shanghai grocery store for $46 CYN ($9 AUD). 'I was going to buy some meat for dinner tonight and I was going to get some ground beef, so what used to be here is American ground beef and now … it says Australian ground beef,' the content creator explained in a TikTok video. 'The whole idea that China is hurting because of the tariffs, they're not, because they just buy from other places because they're not as dependent on the US. 'So China ain't hurting, and I guess we're all gonna start eating Australian beef in China now. I'm sure it tastes good so welcome to the new world.' Meat and Livestock Australia data showed a hefty increase in the nation's grain fed beef exports to China in 2025. More than 21,000 tonnes of Australian beef arrived in China in February and March, representing a 40 per cent increase on the same time last year. In April, Australia exported a record 37,000 tonnes of beef in a single month. China bought a third of that total. Australian exporters were capitalising on record levels of supply, according to experts. But MLA's global market analyst Tim Jackson was hesitant to attribute China's growing appetite for Australian meat to the ongoing trade war with the US. 'It's difficult to say at the moment, these are fairly early figures and we'd need to wait for more information to come out and get a better understanding of that trade dynamic,' he previously told the ABC. The beef trade between the US and China – worth an estimated AU$2.5billion to the Americans – has been largely halted by reciprocal tariff measures. The US Meat Federation stated 'the majority of US beef production is now ineligible for China' due to trade restrictions in April. 'This impasse definitely hit our March beef shipments harder and the severe impact will continue until China lives up to its commitments under the Phase One Economic and Trade Agreement.' In April, global meat analyst Brett Stuart said that Australia was the 'lone supplier' of high-quality, white fat marbled beef in China. '(US beef) sales to China have fallen to zero … and not only is the market now closed based on the March 16 production date, but the combined retaliation tariffs by China now take the tariff on US beef to 116 per cent, a level that will quickly halt trade.' On Friday, US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer accused China of ' violating' a trade agreement made in Geneva in May. The handshake agreement between the world's two largest economies was widely seen as a way to tamper tensions. The agreement made between Mr Greer, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and top Chinese officials stipulated that the two countries would unwind tariffs and trade restrictions on certain critical minerals. Mr Greer accused China of slow-walking that process during the interview Friday. China was hit with a tariff rate in excess of 145 percent earlier this year before the agreement, but the rate then came down to around 30 percent. Trump said he expected to talk to Chinese President Xi Jinping during an Oval Office press conference with Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) leader Elon Musk on Friday.

US is heading for a sharp economic downturn, OECD warns
US is heading for a sharp economic downturn, OECD warns

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

US is heading for a sharp economic downturn, OECD warns

Donald Trump's aggressive trade policies have sent the global economy into a downturn, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has warned. The US economy will be among the hardest hit with growth slowing from 2.8 percent in 2004 to just 1.6 percent this year, according to the group's new forecasts. The Paris-based organization also predicted on Tuesday that Trump's tariffs will hit the global economy harder than expected, slashing its growth forecast for the year down to 2.9 percent compared to 3.3 percent last year. If consumer price expectations become de-anchored the Fed could even be forced to raise rates again, the report warned. 'Weakened economic prospects will be felt around the world, with almost no exception,' OECD chief economist Alvaro Pereira said in the report. Uncertainty from the rapidly changing policies is also hitting consumer confidence and holding back investment, according to the report. The Economic Outlook report said that besides the US the slowdown will be concentrated in Canada, Mexico and China, countries hardest hit by Trump's tariffs. The OECD has called on governments to ease trade tensions and work to eliminate uncertainty. 'Agreements to ease trade tensions and lower tariffs and other trade barriers will be instrumental to revive growth and investment and avoid rising prices,' the OECD said. 'This is by far the most important policy priority.' The report comes as its members, including US trade representative Jamieson Greer, prepare to meet in Paris for their annual meeting. The OECD also criticized other key Trump policies including his vast reductions in the federal workforce and curbs on immigration, both of which are also dragging on the economy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store