Today' Focus

        Hangzhou Jinjiang Group's general manager Zhang Jianyang, vice general manager Sun Jiabin and their team had  attended the SECOND BELT AND ROAD FORUM FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION, they also attended the signing ceremony of comprehensive strateg...

Domestic News

    Nature lover

  • China Aluminium Network
  • Post Time: 2008/4/9
  • Click Amount: 539

    At Chinalco's Aurukun bauxite mining construction site in Queensland, Australia, the future partially rests on the number of turtles that have crawled across the area in a select period of time.


    The endangered turtles are a crucial part of the Chinese company's A$3 billion ($2.58 billion) project environmental assessment test.


    The Aurukun bauxite project is the largest investment by a Chinese company in Australia but if the number of turtles decreases after several months of monitoring, the deal could be off.


    Aluminum Corporation of China (Chinalco), a global non-ferrous metal heavyweight made headlines last year for its blockbuster overseas acquisitions. It has pledged to environmental protection and energy conservation at home and abroad.


    The turtle census is only one part of the environmental report card. It will take two years to conduct the full comprehensive test to see whether Chinalco's mining plan will damage the environment and affect its ecological balance and diversity.


     

    Source:
      Copyright and Exemption Declaration :①All articles, pictures and videos that are marked with "China Aluminum Network" on this website are copyright and belong to China Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn). When transshipment, any media, website or individual must list the source from "China Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn)". We seek legal actions against anyone that disobey this. ②Articles that marked as copy from others are for transferring more information to readers, do not represent or endorse their opinions or accuracy and reliability. When other media, website or individuals copy from our website, must keep the source. Anyone that changes the articles' sources will hold the responsibilities for copyright and law problems. We also seek legal actions against anyone that disobey this. ③If any articles copied by our website concern the copyright and other problems, please contact us within one week.