News

DE Global forms new joint venture - East West China LLC.

Filed under: General — Edward @ 1:57 pm

DE Global has formed a joint venture with East West Associates of Charlotte, NC, USA.  This joint venture allows us to dramatically expand services offerings to clients.

Doing Business in China, Vietnam and Asia

Thousands of companies large and small are operating in Asia.  Many have entered the marketplace to service a growing Asian customer base and compete in the domestic market.  However, costs are increasing, domestic competitors are emerging and established US firms are adopting more sophisticated manufacturing strategies. 

Thus, the competitive bar is much higher and to be successful, companies must employ best manufacturing and operational practices in order to successfully compete.

Manufacturing and operational excellence is critical for companies operating in this market.  Asia has unique cultural and business practices, and as a result, companies need to apply tailored business practices to ensure their success in this competitive market.

East West provides manufacturing and operational consulting for those companies operating in the Asia Pacific region.  Our Team consists of seasoned operational executives from global corporations like IBM, Michelin, and Owens Corning and operates with US and Shanghai-based offices and resources. 

We assist firms in various stages of Doing Business in Asia, including:

  • Identification and qualification of Asian suppliers and subcontractors;
  • Start-up of Asian businesses (manufacturing plants, sales offices, subcontracting relationships, etc);
  • Productivity process improvements and operational trouble -shooting at existing Chinese facilities; and
  • Investment in Asian operations.

We have highlighted Four Scenarios in which we are assisting companies Doing Business in Asia:

 Scenario No. 1
Company is sourcing products, or subcontracting, or establishing a
Business Development & Sales Office in Asia

Services include:

  • Sourcing Finished and Component Products
  • Identification and Qualification of Asian Suppliers
  • Supply Chain Development
  • Supplier Assessments
  • Competitive Intelligence Reports and Briefings
  • Industry Market Assessments
  • Business License Formation and Registration
  • Identification of Qualified Chinese Employees
  • Identification of Available Office Space and Support Services
  • Sourcing Finished and Component Products 

Scenario No. 2
Company is establishing Asian manufacturing capabilities

Services include:

  • All Services in Scenario No. 1
  • Site Selection
  • Operational Business Plan Development
  • Project Plan
  • Facility Negotiations
  • Facility Construction and Installations
  • Plant Start-up and Qualification
  • Employee Identification, Qualification and Training
  • Operational and Manufacturing Process Development
  • Interim General Management
  • Joint Venture Partner Identification
  • Joint Venture Negotiations

Scenario No. 3
Company needs Business Process Improvements or Operational Trouble-Shooting
at existing Asian operations
 

Services include:

  • All Services in Scenarios No. 1 and No. 2
  • Productivity and Manufacturing Process Improvements
  • Resolution of Operating Problems, including:
    • Supply Chain Failures
    • Production Ramp-up and Quality Monitoring
    • Verification of Manufacturing Capability vs. Specifications
    • Human Resource Policies and Retention Problems
    • Management and Leadership
    • IP Protection and Mitigation Procedures
    • Operational Transparency
    • Asian Government Relations

Scenario No. 4
Company desires to acquire or divest of existing Asian companies

.Services include:

  • All Services in Scenarios No. 1, 2 and 3
  • Development of Asian Investment Criteria
  • Identification of Investment Targets
  • Manufacturing and Operational Due Diligence
  • Negotiation
  • Integration Planning
  • Transition Execution
  • Post Closing Compliance
  • Cultural Training

Failure to adequately plan and execute in China can lead to major cost overruns which mitigate the potential market benefits.  Underestimating the complexity and resources required to operate successfully in Asia can also create real problems supplying critical customers and drain capital.  East West can assist your company in mitigating the risks and ensuring the successful management of your company’s Asian operations.

East West China, LLC (EWC) is a manufacturing and operational consulting firm providing strategic implementation and hands-on problem-solving services for clients  in the US and Asia Pacific.  
We have a team of seasoned executives from leading global corporations with deep operational experience in Asia, including IBM, Motorola, Michelin, Sonoco Products and Owens Corning.  Our methodologies and experience provide structure and clarity for companies navigating the Asian marketplace.  EWC operates with US and Shanghai, China offices which interface extensively with the client to ensure seamless execution.

For more information, please visit our website at www.eastwestassoc.com or www.eastwestchina.net , email the company at info@eastwestassoc.com or info@eastwestchina.net or call our Charlotte, NC headquarters at +1 704-364-8893 or Shanghai, China headquarters at +86 21 5116 8790.

Ban slapped on polluting cities, zones

Filed under: General, Environment — Edward @ 2:11 pm

By Sun Xiaohua (China Daily) Updated: 2007-07-04 06:40 

No new industrial projects will be approved in several cities and industrial parks along four major river systems to prevent them from being further contaminated. Six cities, two counties and five industrial zones were indicted by the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) for their role in polluting the Yangtze, Yellow, Huaihe and Haihe rivers. 

SEPA will not approve any projects for three months apart from treatment plants and recycling facilities; and the ban will not be lifted until the sources of untreated wastewater are shut down and treatment facilities installed. 

Pan Yue, vice-minister of SEPA, told China Daily that the environmental authorities had zeroed in on the areas following a thorough investigation. Surveillance by the environmental watchdog from January to April showed that water quality in these places was extremely poor, said Pan. Altogether, 32 heavily polluting factories and six wastewater treatment plants were blacklisted by SEPA and ordered to fix their “environmental problems” in three months. 

“Suspending approval of new industrial projects is the toughest measure that SEPA can take, given its (limited) authority,” Pan said. But he is worried about vested local interests. “Pursuit of short-term goals is leading to ever increasing pollution despite various measures,” Pan said. “Traditional ways of development have caused the near breakdown of China’s resources and environment; and people’s lives are in great danger.” 

Last year, polluted or seriously polluted water in the country’s seven major river systems accounted for 26 percent of the total. And water quality in seven out of the nine lakes under surveillance was so bad that it posed danger to human skin on contact. 

(China Daily 07/04/2007 page1) For the full article see http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-07/04/content_909239.htm

China’s business climate index remains high in first quarter

Filed under: General — Edward @ 4:18 pm

China’s national business climate index rose 8.2 percent year on year to 139.7 points in the first quarter, said the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Thursday.

The index, based on a survey of 19,500 Chinese enterprises by the NBS, has remained at a high level since the second half of 2003.

The mining sector recorded the highest index at 157.9 points, followed by the information technology sector with 155.1 points and the wholesale and retail trade with 151.7 points.

The index for the catering sector was 148.8 points, up 13.5 points from a year ago, the highest rise of any sector.

The index for large enterprises was 162.7 points, much higher than the indices for medium and small sized ones which stood at 126.7 points and 116.7 points.

The indices for China’s eastern, central and western regions were 143.9 points, 138.0 points and 132.8 points, up 10.1 points, 5.5 points and 8.7 points respectively.

Source: Xinhua http://english.people.com.cn/200704/06/eng20070406_364258.html

Common interests greater than differences between China, U.S

Filed under: General — Edward @ 4:14 pm

Different views on some issues “are normal” due to different historical and cultural backgrounds.”What’s most important is that we have much more in common than what separates us, and we have established mechanisms to address our differences”, said Wu Bangguo, chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress(NPC).

Twenty-five Congressmen from the Judiciary Committee and Foreign Affairs Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Aspen Institute took part in the meeting held in Beijing on 05 April 2007.

For more detail see http://english.people.com.cn/200704/06/eng20070406_364213.html

China widens the net to prosecute IPR pirates

Filed under: General — Edward @ 2:34 pm

China’s top court has stepped up the fight against intellectual piracy by lowering the threshold to prosecute people manufacture or sell counterfeit intellectual property products.

A new judicial interpretation issued by the Supreme People’s Court on Thursday states that anyone who manufactures 500 or more counterfeit copies (discs) of computer software, music, movies, TV series and other audio-video products can be prosecuted and faces a prison term of up to three years.

Despite repeated police raids, hawkers of pirated discs re-emerge on Chinese streets as soon as the anti-piracy campaign begins to ebb.

The piracy issue has been a sore point in China-U.S. trade relations and the latest judicial change seems to be aimed at addressing overseas complaints that the country is too lenient with IPR violators.

According to judicial sources, courts around China settled 17,769 IPR protection cases in 2006. But most of these cases were handled by civil courts. There were only 2,277 criminal prosecutions, with 3,508 people convicted.

The new rules, jointly prepared by the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, also widen the definition of a “serious IPR offender” — anyone who produces more than 2,500 counterfeit copies can now be thrown into jail for up to seven years.

The rules are effective immediately, the top court said. They replace the 2004 rules whose net only extended to infringers who produced 1,000 pirated discs and which defined “serious offenders” as those who produced over 5,000 copies.

Critics expect a new surge of IPR cases in Chinese courts now that the new rules have come into effect. They constitute a stern warning to pirates that the government will not go soft on IPR infringement.

Sources with the Supreme People’s Court said they made the change in order to deal with “new problems” in the crackdown on piracy.

“The courts will extend the protection of intellectual property rights and play to the full their role in punishing infringers and preventing crimes,” a court spokesman said.

To fight rampant piracy, China lowered the counterfeit product threshold in 2004. Official statistics show that IPR cases that came to court in China rose 28 percent in 2005, the first year of the new rules.

That year, a total of 3,567 cases concerning the manufacture of fake products and illegal sales of pirated products went to criminal courts.

Courts have also been instructed to raise fines for convicted counterfeiters. “Fines can range from one to 15 times the illegal gains, or from 50 to 200 percent of the business turnover,” according to the new judicial interpretation.

This will be welcome news to those who complain that monetary punishments for piracy violators are too low and that “the cost of IPR crime” remains low.

In January, the top court issued a notice ordering stricter penalties for IPR violators, saying “all illegal gains and manufacturing tools of IPR violators should be confiscated and their pirated products destroyed.”

The new rules also tighten the rules on the granting of probation.

In another measure to cast the anti-piracy net wider, the top court has instructed IPR criminal courts to accept litigation cases filed by individual piracy victims, in addition to those filed by procurators.

The judicial change came as the state announced big seizures of pirated products and said it plans to improve the transparency of IPR trials by allowing foreigners to sit in.

Envoys of foreign governments and representatives of international organizations will be allowed to attend IPR trials if they wish, said Jiang Zengwei of the State Office of Intellectual Property Protection on Wednesday.

This will be the first time overseas representatives have been allowed to attend public IPR trials, an official from the top court told Xinhua.

Major trials will be publicized in the media.

Meanwhile, in the largest single crackdown on CD and DVD piracy in China’s history, more than 1.81 million pirated CDs and DVDs were seized in a production factory in Guangzhou, capital of south China’s Guangdong Province on March 17, the government announced on Tuesday.

Thirty production machines in 11 warehouses were confiscated and 13 people arrested in the case.

But a circular from the police authority said the fight against piracy was still very arduous, and should be a priority for public security departments nationwide.

The government has launched a “spring campaign” against illegal and pirated publications that will last until May.

People providing information about piracy crimes that lead to convictions can be rewarded by the police.

Source: Xinhua 05 April 2007

http://english.people.com.cn/200704/06/eng20070406_364218.html

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