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2018 INTERIM REPORT * Bank of Chongqing Co., Ltd
BANK OF CHONGQING CO., LTD.* 重慶銀行股份有限公司* (A joint stock company incorporated in the People's Republic of China with limited liability) (Stock Code: 1963) (Stock Code of Preference Shares: 4616) 2018 INTERIM REPORT * Bank of Chongqing Co., Ltd. is not an authorized institution within the meaning of the Banking Ordinance (Chapter 155 of Laws of Hong Kong), not subject to the supervision of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, and not authorized to carry on banking and/or deposit-taking business in Hong Kong. CONTENTS 1. Corporate Information 2 2. Financial Highlights 3 3. Management Discussions and Analysis 6 3.1 Environment and Outlook 6 3.2 Financial Review 8 3.3 Business Overview 40 3.4 Employees and Human Resources 51 Management 3.5 Risk Management 52 3.6 Capital Management 58 4. Change in Share Capital and Shareholders 61 5. Directors, Supervisors and Senior Management 65 6. Significant Events 67 7. Report on Review of Interim Financial Information 69 8. Interim Condensed Consolidated Financial 70 Information and Notes Thereto 9. Unaudited Supplementary Financial Information 155 10. Organizational Chart 158 11. List of Branch Outlets 159 12. Definitions 167 Corporate Information Legal Name and Abbreviation in Chinese Date and Registration Authority of 重慶銀行股份有限公司 (Abbreviation: 重慶銀行) Initial Incorporation September 2, 1996 Name in English Administration for Industry and Bank of Chongqing Co., Ltd. Commerce of Chongqing, the PRC Legal Representative Unified Social Credit Code of Business License LIN Jun 91500000202869177Y Authorized Representatives Financial License Registration Number RAN Hailing B0206H250000001 WONG Wah Sing Auditors Secretary to the Board International: PENG Yanxi PricewaterhouseCoopers Address: 22/F, Prince’s Building, Central, Joint Company Secretaries Hong Kong WONG Wah Sing HO Wing Tsz Wendy Domestic: PricewaterhouseCoopers Zhong Tian LLP Registered Address and Postal Code Address: 11/F, PricewaterhouseCoopers Center, No. -
Environmental and Social Management System Monitoring Report
Environmental and Social Management System Monitoring Report February 2017 People’s Republic of China: Gansu Featured Agriculture and Financial Services System Development Project This environmental and social monitoring report is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB’s Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. Your attention is directed to the terms of us section of this website. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. Gansu Featured Agriculture and Financial Service System Development Project 甘肃特色农业 金融服 体系建 目 Safeguard Monitoring Report 保监测 告 No.: 3312-PRC 贷款 3312-PRC Reporting Period 告期 st st From 1 Julyto 31 Dec. 2016 2016 7 1日 12 31日 Prepared by the Project Management Office of Gansu Featured Agriculture and Financial Service System Development Project 甘肃特色农业 金融服 体系建 目管理 公室编制 Date: Feb.27, 2017 日期 2017 2 27日 1 目录 TABLE OF CONTENTS 执行摘要 EXECUTIVE ABSTRACT 3 ............................................................................... I. 引言 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................... 9 II. 告期 要行 工作 ACTIONS AND PROGRESS RELATED TO ESMS OF THE RPOJECT ..................................................................................................................... 11 系 能力建 i. Institutional Capacity Building ................................................ 11 完 首笔子贷款的准备 行前 ii. The completion of the preparation for the first sub loans and to be pre-reviewed by ADB ......................................................................... 18 iii. ESMS 的履行 The implementation of ESMS .................................................... 25 iv. 公示申诉机制 The Publicity of the grievance mechanism................................ -
Walk Wise Lookback Report 2011
Walk Wise LOOKBACK REPORT AIP Foundation and Chevron: Transforming Lives of Students and Communities on the Roads in China 2011-2020 1 Table of Contents 2 The Issue: Road Safety Worldwide and in China 7 Investing in Community Safety 9 What We Achieved 11 Bringing road safety into the classroom Behavior change starts with education 15 and empowerment 17 Road modifications can change lives 19 Operating with Sustainability 23 What’s Next: The Future Safer Communities 1 THE ISSUE: ROAD SAFETY WORLDWIDE AND IN CHINA 2 Over 1.35 million people lose their lives on the world’s In this ongoing crisis, children are particularly vulnerable roads each year, causing immense physical, psychological, on the roads. Their smaller stature reduces visibility to and economic consequences for victims, their families, drivers, especially on roads in underdeveloped areas with and their broader communities.1 The global road crash poor lighting and inadequate pedestrian infrastructure. crisis alone generates economic losses of up to 3-6% of Moreover, due to their ongoing cognitive development, the GDP of low- and middle-income countries—impacting children are more prone to engaging in higher-risk road the development of regions that are in the greatest need behaviors, such as running into a street without checking of sustained growth. As the World Bank describes, “Road for vehicles. Even the act of crossing a street requires traffic injuries are a public health and social equity issue, children to understand how to identify safe crossing disproportionately affecting the vulnerable road users and locations and to make safe timing decisions in response the poor.”2 to traffic flow.4 As rapid urbanization and motorization outpace countries’ Promoting safer behaviors on the roads in order to protect efforts to promote road safety awareness and safer the most vulnerable road users relies on comprehensive infrastructure, road users suffer drastic consequences. -
45022-002: Jiangxi Ji'an Sustainable Urban Transport Project
Social Monitoring Report Project Number: 45022-002 Semi-Annual Report May 2018 PRC: Jiangxi Ji’an Sustainable Urban Transport Project Prepared by Jiangxi Academy of Social Science for the People’s Republic of China and the Asian Development Bank. This social monitoring report is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB's Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status of any territory or area. Asian Development Bank 3216-PRC ADB Loan Ji’an Urban Sustainable Transport Project External Social and Resettlement Monitoring No.2 Report (October 2017 to March 2018) Monitoring agency: Jiangxi Academy of Social Science May 2018 Executive Abstract According to the ADB’s requirement, the external monitoring of resettlement will be carried out once every six months during the resettlement implementation. The team of EM carried out a monitoring and evaluation on implementation course of LA, HD and resettlement from October 2017 to March 2018. The team adopted document method, sampling survey and depth interview method (including interview with affected households and heads of EA.) The results of E&M show both five roads involving LA and HD. The expropriated land and housing carried out based on state policies, and met with the standards of resettlement plan approved by ADB. -
A New Raptorial Dinosaur with Exceptionally Long Feathering Provides Insights Into Dromaeosaurid flight Performance
ARTICLE Received 11 Apr 2014 | Accepted 11 Jun 2014 | Published 15 Jul 2014 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5382 A new raptorial dinosaur with exceptionally long feathering provides insights into dromaeosaurid flight performance Gang Han1, Luis M. Chiappe2, Shu-An Ji1,3, Michael Habib4, Alan H. Turner5, Anusuya Chinsamy6, Xueling Liu1 & Lizhuo Han1 Microraptorines are a group of predatory dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaurs with aero- dynamic capacity. These close relatives of birds are essential for testing hypotheses explaining the origin and early evolution of avian flight. Here we describe a new ‘four-winged’ microraptorine, Changyuraptor yangi, from the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota of China. With tail feathers that are nearly 30 cm long, roughly 30% the length of the skeleton, the new fossil possesses the longest known feathers for any non-avian dinosaur. Furthermore, it is the largest theropod with long, pennaceous feathers attached to the lower hind limbs (that is, ‘hindwings’). The lengthy feathered tail of the new fossil provides insight into the flight performance of microraptorines and how they may have maintained aerial competency at larger body sizes. We demonstrate how the low-aspect-ratio tail of the new fossil would have acted as a pitch control structure reducing descent speed and thus playing a key role in landing. 1 Paleontological Center, Bohai University, 19 Keji Road, New Shongshan District, Jinzhou, Liaoning Province 121013, China. 2 Dinosaur Institute, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, 900 Exposition Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90007, USA. 3 Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, 26 Baiwanzhuang Road, Beijing 100037, China. 4 University of Southern California, Health Sciences Campus, BMT 403, Mail Code 9112, Los Angeles, California 90089, USA. -
Transmission of Han Pictorial Motifs Into the Western Periphery: Fuxi and Nüwa in the Wei-Jin Mural Tombs in the Hexi Corridor*8
DOI: 10.4312/as.2019.7.2.47-86 47 Transmission of Han Pictorial Motifs into the Western Periphery: Fuxi and Nüwa in the Wei-Jin Mural Tombs in the Hexi Corridor*8 ∗∗ Nataša VAMPELJ SUHADOLNIK 9 Abstract This paper examines the ways in which Fuxi and Nüwa were depicted inside the mu- ral tombs of the Wei-Jin dynasties along the Hexi Corridor as compared to their Han counterparts from the Central Plains. Pursuing typological, stylistic, and iconographic approaches, it investigates how the western periphery inherited the knowledge of the divine pair and further discusses the transition of the iconographic and stylistic design of both deities from the Han (206 BCE–220 CE) to the Wei and Western Jin dynasties (220–316). Furthermore, examining the origins of the migrants on the basis of historical records, it also attempts to discuss the possible regional connections and migration from different parts of the Chinese central territory to the western periphery. On the basis of these approaches, it reveals that the depiction of Fuxi and Nüwa in Gansu area was modelled on the Shandong regional pattern and further evolved into a unique pattern formed by an iconographic conglomeration of all attributes and other physical characteristics. Accordingly, the Shandong region style not only spread to surrounding areas in the central Chinese territory but even to the more remote border regions, where it became the model for funerary art motifs. Key Words: Fuxi, Nüwa, the sun, the moon, a try square, a pair of compasses, Han Dynasty, Wei-Jin period, Shandong, migration Prenos slikovnih motivov na zahodno periferijo: Fuxi in Nüwa v grobnicah s poslikavo iz obdobja Wei Jin na območju prehoda Hexi Izvleček Pričujoči prispevek v primerjalni perspektivi obravnava upodobitev Fuxija in Nüwe v grobnicah s poslikavo iz časa dinastij Wei in Zahodni Jin (220–316) iz province Gansu * The author acknowledges the financial support of the Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS) in the framework of the research core funding Asian languages and Cultures (P6-0243). -
Ji'an Literati and the Local in Song-Yuan-Ming China
Ji’an Literati and the Local in Song-Yuan-Ming China gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd i 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM China Studies Published for the Institute for Chinese Studies University of Oxford Editors Glen Dudbridge Frank Pieke VOLUME 13 gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd ii 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM Ji’an Literati and the Local in Song-Yuan-Ming China By Anne Gerritsen LEIDEN • BOSTON 2007 gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd iii 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM On the cover : Fragment of a Song dynasty inscription in the Jishui County Museum, Jiangxi province. Photograph by author. This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A C.I.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISSN 1570-1344 ISBN 978 90 04 15603 6 © Copyright 2007 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Koninklijke Brill NV provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910, Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. printed in the netherlands gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd iv 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM To my parents gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd v 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM gerritsen_f1_prelims.indd vi 2/6/2007 6:56:53 PM CONTENTS List of Maps .............................................................................. -
Spatial Distribution Characteristics of Biomass and Carbon Storage in Forest Vegetation in Chongqing Based on RS and GIS
Nature Environment and Pollution Technology ISSN: 0972-6268 Vol. 15 No. 4 pp. 1381-1388 2016 An International Quarterly Scientific Journal Original Research Paper Spatial Distribution Characteristics of Biomass and Carbon Storage in Forest Vegetation in Chongqing Based on RS and GIS Qiannan Liu*(**), Zhiyun Ouyang***†, Ainong Li* and Weihua Xu*** *Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu Sichuan, 610041, China **University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China ***Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100085, China †Corresponding author: Zhiyun Ouyang ABSTRACT Nat. Env. & Poll. Tech. Website: www.neptjournal.com Research on the spatial distribution characteristics of carbon storage in forest vegetation not only facilitates the study of carbon sink and ecological compensation of the forest ecosystem, but also Received: 15-12-2015 provides basic data for recovering and reconstructing the forest ecosystem and increasing the Accepted: 28-01-2016 carbon sink. In this study, remote sensing images of Landsat TM (August) in 2011 and a large amount Key Words: of actual surveyed data of the sample plots were used as the main and supplementary data sources, Biomass respectively. Chongqing was selected as the study site to quantitatively estimate the biomass, carbon Forest vegetation storage, and carbon density of forest vegetation based on the biomass-remote sensing (RS) geoscientific Carbon storage data regression model with the aid of RS and GIS techniques. With the spatial analysis function of Vegetation index ArcGIS, factors affecting the geographic distribution of biomass were investigated from a macroscopic perspective, and the geographical distribution pattern characteristics of biomass in the study area were quantitatively discussed. -
World Bank Document
Name of Subproject: Nuisance Free Vegetable, Changsha County Unit:Thousand Cost estimate Contract Value Actural Procurement Review by Issuing Contract Contract No. Contract Description Issuing Remarks USD method Bank of BD signing USD RMB of BD RMB Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Equivalent Equivalent Civil Works 2005 2006 Completed, with the scale Hn-1-1 GJP 80 type plastic sheds 52000m 2 4888.00 605.70 CP N 2006.9 2006.12 5516.70 incresed to 60,000 m2 U-shape canal lining 13000 m, Field roads Hn-1-2 1300.00 161.09 NCB N 2006.2 4000m. 2006.4 2006.6 3801.52 Completed Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Hn-1-3 Garden construction 2000 mu 1668.00 206.69 NCB N 2006.3 2007 Vegetable processing workshop 800 , Hn-1-1 880.00 112.82 NCB N 2007.4 2008.5 Under bidding Vegetable quality test room 300 Hn-1-2 GJP 80 type plastic sheds 42979 4039.20 517.85 NCB N 2007.7 2007.11 2008.2 3922.74 Under construction 2008 Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized 2008Subtotal Goods 2005 ÃÃ ÃÃ Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Name of Subproject: Nuisance Free Vegetable, Changsha County Unit:Thousand Cost estimate Contract Value Actural Procurement Review by Issuing Contract Contract No. Contract Description Issuing Remarks USD method Bank of BD signing USD RMB of BD RMB Equivalent Equivalent 2006 Training Equipment projector 1 set,computer 1 Hn-1-4 set, printer 1 set, video camera 1 set, digital 62.00 7.68 NCB Completed copier 1 set. -
2. Ethnic Minority Policy
Public Disclosure Authorized ETHNIC MINORITY DEVELOPMENT PLAN FOR THE WORLD BANK FUNDED Public Disclosure Authorized GANSU INTEGRATED RURAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DEMONSTRATION TOWN PROJECT Public Disclosure Authorized GANSU PROVINCIAL DEVELOPMENT AND REFORM COMMISSION Public Disclosure Authorized LANZHOU , G ANSU i NOV . 2011 ii CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................ ................................ 1.1 B ACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES OF PREPARATION .......................................................................1 1.2 K EY POINTS OF THIS EMDP ..........................................................................................................2 1.3 P REPARATION METHOD AND PROCESS ..........................................................................................3 2. ETHNIC MINORITY POLICY................................................................ .......................... 2.1 A PPLICABLE LAWS AND REGULATIONS ...........................................................................................5 2.1.1 State level .............................................................................................................................5 2.1.2 Gansu Province ...................................................................................................................5 2.1.3 Zhangye Municipality ..........................................................................................................6 2.1.4 Baiyin City .............................................................................................................................6 -
Chongqing Handbook All Essential Information You Need to Know About Chongqing
Chongqing Handbook All essential information you need to know about Chongqing Presented by Chongqing Expat Club www.cqexpat.com Copyright 2008. All Rights Reserved. Table of Contents CHAPTER ONE - ABOUT CHONGQING Page 3 CHAPTER TWO – THE CITY HUBS Page 3 CHAPTER THREE – CITY TRANSPORT Page 4 CHAPTER FOUR – ATTRACTIONS Page 6 CHAPTER FIVE – NIGHTLIFE & ENTERTAINMENT Page 16 CHAPTER SIX – ACCOMMODATION Page 18 CHAPTER SEVEN – INTERNATIONAL FOOD Page 21 CHAPTER EIGHT– SHOPPING Page 24 CHAPTER NINE - EDUCATION Page 27 CHAPTER TEN – HEALTH CARE Page 29 CHAPTER ELEVEN – EMBASSIES & CONSULATES Page 31 CHAPTER TWELVE – USEFUL CONTACTS Page 32 CHAPTER THIRTEEN – USEFUL WORDS and PHRASES Page 32 CHAPTER ONE - ABOUT CHONGQING Chongqing is the economic hub of southwest China and the fourth Municipality in China (after Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin). Chongqing is situated in the east of southwest China, about 2,500km up the Yangtze River from Shanghai. Under its jurisdiction there are 40 districts, cities and counties. It covers an area of 82,000 square kilometres with a total population of 31 million. An estimated 6 million people live in urban Chongqing city. Downtown Chongqing lies at the point where the Yangtze River and the Jialing River merge. Known as the Mountain City, the whole city is built against a backdrop of hills and rivers, characterized by zig-zagging roads and overlapping houses. It is also known as one of the four Furnace Cities for its hot summers and the Foggy City for its misty winters. CHAPTER TWO – THE CITY HUBS Chongqing has five major business and shopping precincts - the oldest and most important being Jiefangbei situated within what remains of the Old Walled City. -
The Temple-Tsinghua Joint Master of Laws (LL.M.)
Temple-Tsinghua Rule of Law Program “A country's development needs very strong support from its legal system. We have a lot to learn from developed countries that have good rule of law. By The Temple-Tsinghua joint getting the chance to be trained in the Temple-Tsinghua rule of law program, Chinese students learn about the Master of Laws (LL.M.) Anglo-American legal system, and then may apply what program, based at we've learned to the Chinese legal system. The Temple- Tsinghua program has given so many Chinese people a Tsinghua University in chance to understand rule of law in the Anglo-American legal system. It is like fresh air to the Chinese legal Beijing, is the longest- Dr. Sha Lijin, Professor and Vice Dean system. In the work of Temple-Tsinghua graduates, the China University of Political Science and Law rule of law can be reflected better and better with the established, degree- Temple-Tsinghua joint LL.M. program, Class of '01 help of this program.” granting, rule-of-law capacity building program “Rule of law is the goal of every lawyer and judge. As a lawyer, you represent the legal interests of your client; in China. We provide as a judge, you issue a judgment fairly to each party. That's the value of rule of law in China. If every legal capacity building to professional plays their role right, that's how we'll achieve rule of law in China. After graduation from the judges, prosecutors, Temple-Tsinghua program, we are able to help ourselves and our country to improve.