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Asia Pacific Enterprise Awards and Asia Responsible Enterprise Awards 2025 China Chapter Celebrates Exemplary Business Excellence and Responsible Leadership

Zawya4 days ago
SHANGHAI, CHINA - Media OutReach Newswire - 23 July 2025 - The Asia Pacific Enterprise Awards (APEA) and Asia Responsible Enterprise Awards (AREA) China Chapter successfully concluded its latest edition, honoring the nation's most exceptional enterprises and visionary business leaders at the forefront of innovation, resilience, and sustainable growth in an increasingly dynamic economy. Organized by leading regional NGO, Enterprise Asia, the prestigious dual awards ceremony took place at Grand Hyatt Shanghai on 11 July 2025.
The joint awards ceremony recognized outstanding enterprises and entrepreneurs who exemplify business excellence, leadership, and social responsibility in navigating disruption and embracing the green, inclusive economy of tomorrow.
A rigorous evaluation process, led by a distinguished panel of judges, assessed over 150 nominees across eight categories for the AREA and four categories for the APEA. The AREA recognized exemplary leaders and enterprises that have demonstrated an unwavering commitment to sustainability and responsible business practices. In parallel, the APEA honored exceptional organizations and entrepreneurs who exhibited exceptional business performance, strategic foresight, and visionary leadership in navigating today's dynamic business landscape.
In his welcome address, Datuk William Ng, Vice Chairman of Enterprise Asia, stated, 'In an era marked by unprecedented challenges and transformation, it is the enterprises and leaders who dare to innovate, uphold responsible business values, and commit to sustainable progress that will define the future. Tonight, we are here to celebrate not just their business success, but their resilience, foresight, and positive impact on society and the environment.'.
Among the outstanding AREA award recipients, Town Ray Electrical (Huizhou) Limited received the award under the Green Leadership category for its exemplary environmental stewardship. The company achieved significant results by upgrading waste gas treatment, using low-VOC coating materials, adopting energy-saving equipment, and installing photovoltaic systems. These efforts reduced VOC emissions by 3.699 tons, saved 480 tons of standard coal, cut carbon emissions by 2,792 tons, reduced hazardous waste by 15%, and achieved 100% packaging recycling. The above achievements have also enabled the company to make contributions to society in the field of sustainable development.
E.SUN Bank (China) Company, Ltd.'s strong governance, transparency, and accountability have earned it a two-time win in the Corporate Governance category. The bank leads with practices exceeding regulatory standards, including fully recorded Board meetings, independent performance reviews, and a well-indexed annual report. It has received favorable evaluations three times in corporate governance assessments among banks and insurers and maintained over 98% customer satisfaction for three consecutive years.
Demonstrating its strong commitment to responsible banking, Bank of China (Hong Kong) Limited ('BOCHK') earned dual honours in the Social Empowerment and Corporate Sustainability Reporting categories. Since 2016, the 'BOCHK x Food Angel' initiative has benefited over 210,000 people, recycled 8,800 tonnes of surplus edible food, and produced over 2.1 million meals. These efforts have reduced food waste and supported community dignity through innovations such as the 'Self-serve Station'. Meanwhile, BOCHK's has also established a robust sustainability governance framework and its Sustainability Reports strictly align with GRI standards, HKEX's ESG Guide and follow guidelines such as TCFD, SASB and SDGs. The Reports have also been verified by an independent third party with reasonable assurance.
One of the world's leading aluminum producers, China Hongqiao Group Co., Ltd., also marked a key milestone in its ESG journey with its win in the Corporate Sustainability Reporting category. Guided by a robust ESG governance framework, its latest sustainability report outlines the ambitious '2555 dual carbon' targets—peaking emissions by 2025 and achieving net-zero by 2055—alongside goals such as increasing green electricity usage to 70% by 2030 and reducing aluminum carbon intensity by 40%. The report highlights extensive stakeholder engagement, reinforcing the Group's commitment to transparency, accountability, and long-term value creation.
Further exemplifying leadership in social responsibility, Techtronic Industries (TTI) was recognized under the Social Empowerment category for its transformative initiative, 'Building Resilience, Empowering Communities'. In partnership with Habitat for Humanity, the project addressed environmental, poverty, and infrastructure challenges by building eight new homes, renovating 20 others in Go Cong and Thai Nguyen, and improving WASH infrastructure for more than 1,800 individuals. Through the Participatory Approach for Safe Shelter Awareness (PASSA) and active employee volunteerism, TTI embedded sustainable development into its core strategy while fostering lasting community impact.
Meanwhile, other esteemed winners of the AREA included industry leaders such as Alibaba's Taobao Tmall Group: Xianyu Platform; China Construction Bank Corporation; JD.com, Inc.; Ping An Bank Co., Ltd.; Qisda Corporation, among others. In the APEA segment, notable winners included Kaishan Group Co., Ltd. and CTF Services Limited, recognized for their unparalleled achievements in business excellence.
The APEA and AREA 2025 China Chapter were co-organized by Enterprise Accelerator Co., Ltd. and proudly supported by the Hong Kong Young Industrialists Council Limited (HKYIC), International Chamber of Commerce - Hong Kong (ICC-HK), MayCham China in Shanghai, Shanghai Chamber of Commerce in Guangzhou, SingCham Shanghai, and Strategic Public Relations Group. PR Newswire is the official news release distribution partner, with Dailywire.asia as the official media partner and Osin Au Pty Ltd as the official beverage sponsor.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CATEGORY
ORGANIZATION
WINNING ESG PROGRAM
AUTOHOME INC.
AUTOHOME SUSTAINABLE CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
BUDWEISER BREWING COMPANY APAC LIMITED
GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK
E.SUN BANK (CHINA) COMPANY,LTD.
THOROUGH CORPORATE GOVERNANCE & EASY-TO-BE UNDERSTOOD AND DETAILED DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION
CIRCULAR ECONOMY LEADERSHIP CATEGORY
ORGANIZATION
WINNING ESG PROGRAM
ALIBABA'S TAOBAO TMALL GROUP: XIANYU PLATFORM
XIANYU LEVERAGES TECHNOLOGY TO PROMOTE CIRCULAR ECONOMY AND SHAPE SUSTAINABLE CONSUMPTION FOR THE NEXT GENERATION
BUDWEISER BREWING COMPANY APAC LIMITED
CIRCULAR PACKAGING
GRANDBLUE ENVIRONMENT CO., LTD.
GRANDBLUE MODEL EMPOWERS WASTE-FREE CITIES TO CREATE A CIRCULAR ECONOMY BENCHMARK
QISDA CORPORATION
FROM WASTE TO WEALTH: QISDA'S CIRCULAR TRANSFORMATION
AWARD RECIPIENT LIST OF THE ASIA PACIFIC ENTERPRISE AWARDS (APEA) 2025 CHINA CHAPTER
Hashtag: #Business #Sustainability #ESG
https://www.enterpriseasia.org/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/569303/
https://www.facebook.com/enterpriseasiaofficial
Wechat: Enterprise Asia 亚洲企业商会
https://www.instagram.com/enterpriseasia/
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
About Enterprise Asia
Enterprise Asia is a non-governmental organization in pursuit of creating an Asia that is rich in entrepreneurship as an engine toward sustainable and progressive economic and social development within a world of economic equality. Its two pillars of existence are investment in people and responsible entrepreneurship. Enterprise Asia works with governments, NGOs and other organizations to promote competitiveness and entrepreneurial development, in uplifting the economic status of people across Asia and in ensuring a legacy of hope, innovation and courage for the future generation. Please visit https://www.enterpriseasia.org/ for more information.
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HKSTP Takes Nine Game-Changing AI Tech Ventures to WAIC 2025 to Advance China's AI Plus Vision in Transforming Business and Industry
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HKSTP Takes Nine Game-Changing AI Tech Ventures to WAIC 2025 to Advance China's AI Plus Vision in Transforming Business and Industry

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US and China to resume tariff talks in effort to extend truce
US and China to resume tariff talks in effort to extend truce

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time3 hours ago

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US and China to resume tariff talks in effort to extend truce

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Less selection, More prices
Less selection, More prices

Gulf Today

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Less selection, More prices

With summer in full swing in the United States, retail executives are sweating a different season. It's less than 22 weeks before Christmas, a time when businesses that make and sell consumer goods usually nail down their holiday orders and prices. But President Donald Trump's vacillating trade policies have complicated those end-of-year plans. Balsam Hill, which sells artificial trees and other decorations online, expects to publish fewer and thinner holiday catalogs because the featured products keep changing with the tariff rates the president sets, postpones and revises. 'The uncertainty has led us to spend all our time trying to rejigger what we're ordering, where we're bringing it in, when it's going to get here,' Mac Harman, CEO of Balsam Hill parent company Balsam Brands, said. 'We don't know which items we're going to have to put in the catalog or not.' Months of confusion over which foreign countries' goods may become more expensive to import has left a question mark over the holiday shopping season. US retailers often begin planning for the winter holidays in January and typically finalize the bulk of their orders by the end of June. The seesawing tariffs already have factored into their calculations. The consequences for consumers? Stores may not have the specific gift items customers want come November and December. Some retail suppliers and buyers scaled back their holiday lines rather than risking a hefty tax bill or expensive imports going unsold. Businesses still are setting prices but say shoppers can expect many things to cost more, though by how much depends partly on whether Trump's latest round of 'reciprocal' tariffs kicks in next month. The lack of clarity has been especially disruptive for the US toy industry, which sources nearly 80% of its products from China. 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Dean Smith, who co-owns independent toy stores JaZams in Princeton, New Jersey, and Lahaska, Pennsylvania, said he recently spent an hour and a half running through pricing scenarios with a Canadian distributor because the wholesale cost of some products increased by 20%. Increasing his own prices that much might turn off customers, Smith said, so he explored ways to 'maintain a reasonable margin without raising prices beyond what consumers would accept.' He ordered a lower cost Crazy Forts building set so he would have the toy on hand and left out the kids' edition of the Anomia card game because he didn't think customers would pay what he would have to charge. 'In the end, I had to eliminate half of the products that I normally buy,' Smith said. Hilary Key, owner of The Toy Chest in Nashville, Indiana, said she tries to get new games and toys in early most years to see which ones she should stock up on for the winter holidays. 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The retail industry may have to keep taking a whack-a-mole approach to navigating the White House's latest tariff ultimatums and temporary reprieves. Last week, the president again reset the rates on imports from Brazil, the European Union, Mexico, and other major trading partners but said they would not take effect until Aug. 1. The brief pause should extend the window importers have to bring in seasonal merchandise at the current baseline tariff of 10%. The Port of Los Angeles had the busiest June in its 117-year history after companies raced to secure holiday shipments, and July imports look strong so far, according to Gene Seroka, the port's executive director. 'In my view, we're seeing a peak season push right now to bring in goods ahead of potentially higher tariffs later this summer,' Seroka said Monday. The pace of port activity so far this year reflects a 'tariff whipsaw effect' - imports slowing when tariffs kick in and rebounding when they're paused, he said. 'For us consumers, lower inventory levels, fewer selections and higher prices are likely as we head into the holidays.' Smith, who co-owns the two JaZams stores with his partner, Joanne Farrugia, said they started placing holiday orders two months earlier than usual for 'certain items that we felt were essential for us to have at particular pricing.' They doubled their warehouse space to store the stockpile. But some shoppers are trying to get ahead of higher prices just like businesses are, he said. He's noticed customers snapping up items that will likely be popular during the holidays, like Jellycat plush toys and large stuffed unicorns and dogs. Any sales are welcome, but Smith and Farrugia are wary of having to restock at a higher cost. 'We're just trying to be as friendly as we can to the consumer and still have a product portfolio or profile that is gonna meet the needs of all of our various customers, which is getting more and more challenging by the day,' Smith said. Balsam Brands' Harman said he's had to resign himself to not having as robust a selection of ornaments and frosted trees to sell as in years' past. Soon, it will be too late to import meaningful additions to his range of products. 'Our purpose as a company is to create joy together, and we're going to do our very best to do that this year,' Harman said. 'We're just not going to have a bunch of the items that consumers want this year, and that's not a position we want to be in.' Associated Press

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