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South China Morning Post
31 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
China rolls out record-setting turbine for Tibet hydropower plant
China is ready to install a large impulse turbine at the Datang Zala Hydropower Station in Tibet autonomous region , according to the official Science and Technology Daily. The home-grown turbine, with a maximum capacity of 500 megawatts, has the world's largest single-unit capacity, according to the report on Wednesday. Two turbines will be installed at the station. The 80-tonne turbine left its developer plant at Harbin Electric Machinery Company in northeast China on Wednesday after four years of design and testing. The Datang Zala Hydropower Station is located on the Yuqu River, a tributary of the Nu River, which flows from southwest China through Yunnan province to eastern Myanmar and empties into the Andaman Sea. The turbine is made of martensitic steel, a type of stainless steel known for its durability, strength and corrosion resistance. It has 21 water buckets and an outer diameter measuring 6.23 metres (20 feet). Science and Technology Daily called the turbine the 'heart' of the hydropower unit.

The Standard
31 minutes ago
- The Standard
China's Changan plans European factory, executive says
A Changan logo is pictured at the Changan booth during a media day for the Auto Shanghai show in Shanghai, China April 24, 2025. (Reuters)


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
How Hong Kong can win race to become world's tokenisation hub
When BlackRock's chairman Larry Fink declared in his annual letter that 'every stock, every bond, every fund – every asset – can be tokenised', he wasn't forecasting some distant revolution. He was describing a shift already under way – one that is beginning to reshape how capital is formed, how assets are distributed and who gets access to financial opportunity. At the centre of this transformation is a once-niche concept rapidly entering the mainstream: tokenised real-world assets (RWAs). Today, more than US$24 billion in RWAs circulate on public blockchains. These range from yield-bearing US Treasuries and private credit pools to tokenised commodities and real estate. What once seemed like a cryptocurrency curiosity is becoming part of global financial infrastructure. Behind the scenes, the pipes of capital markets are being quietly rewired. The question is no longer whether tokenisation will reshape finance but who will shape it. With the release of its ' Policy Statement 2.0 on the Development of Digital Assets' on June 26, Hong Kong has made a case that it intends to lead. The statement introduced the 'Leap' framework, which expands the regulatory perimeter to include stablecoin issuers, custodians and RWA platforms. More importantly, it sent a clear message that Hong Kong is actively championing tokenisation rather than just allowing it to happen. The Leap framework – short for legal and regulatory streamlining, expanding tokenised products, advancing use cases and people and partnership development – formalises stablecoin licensing, provides clarity on tokenised exchange-traded funds and builds on earlier pilots in digital bond issuance and green finance. It also embraces a wider vision of encouraging the tokenisation of everything from precious metals to renewable infrastructure.