China's
slowdown may be deeper
Experts
studying electricity consumption in China say the economic slowdown
in the country may be deeper than suspected
UPI,
23
June, 2012
A
well-placed executive in China said three of the largest coal storage
facilities in are sitting on record levels of inventory, The New York
Times reported Saturday.
An
expert in energy consumption in China, Rohan Kendall at global
consulting firm Wood
Mackenzie,
said coal inventories were also reaching record levels at the port
of Qinhuangdao with supplies there topping 9.5 million tons. That
surpasses the previous record of 9.3 million tons, set in November
2008, near the bottom of the global financial downturn.
The
buildup in coal indicates that factories have slowed down, the Times
reported.
As
the evidence of a slowdown in electricity consumption literally
piles up, other experts note that China's official data reporting
has long been taken with a grain of salt.
Goldman
Sachs, among others, have concluded that economic data from China is
not the most reliable. Some of the data is simply based on officials
who don't want to report negative data to the government.
Skepticism
about economic data from China also comes from Beijing, although not
officially. Media activist Web site WikiLeaks has released a
diplomatic cable from Li Keqiang, who called some of the
government's economic statistics "man-made."
Li
is considered to be the next in line to become China's premier this
fall, the Times said.
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