Showing posts with label india. Show all posts
Showing posts with label india. Show all posts

Monday, August 26, 2013

NEWS,22.,23.,24.,25. AND 26.08.2013



Watchdog, Bitcoin group set for talks


US regulators and law enforcement agencies are expected to meet on Monday with an advocacy group for Bitcoin, a digital currency that has been under fire for its purported role in facilitating anonymous money transfers and supporting online purchases of illegal street drugs.
The meeting in Washington was arranged by the Treasury Department's anti-money laundering unit at the request of the Bitcoin Foundation, an advocacy group of Bitcoin-related businesses.
It will be an opportunity for wide-ranging discussions about the digital currency, a Treasury official said.
Bitcoins, which have been around since 2008, first came under scrutiny by law enforcement officials in mid-2011 after media reports surfaced linking the digital currency to the Silk Road online marketplace where marijuana, heroin, LSD and other illicit drugs are sold.
In recent months, the US government has taken steps to rein-in the currency and more regulatory action is expected.
Tokyo-based Mt. Gox, the world's largest exchanger of US dollars with Bitcoins, had two accounts held by its US subsidiary seized this year by agents from the Department of Homeland Security on the grounds that it was operating a money transmitting business without a license.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation reported last year that Bitcoin was used by criminals to move money around the world, and the US Treasury said in March that digital currency firms are money transmitters and must comply with rules that combat money laundering.
The Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs launched an inquiry into Bitcoin and other virtual currencies earlier this month, asking a range of regulators to list what safeguards are in place to prevent criminal activity.

South Sudan passes oil bill


South Sudan's parliament has passed a long-awaited petroleum bill after years of consultation and waits for final approval by President Salva Kiir, a senior lawmaker said on Monday.
Officials hope the bill, which regulates for the first time how the government can spend oil revenues, will make the African producer more attractive for foreign investment by improving transparency.
South Sudan has struggled to build up state institutions and establish the rule of law since winning independence from Sudan in 2011 after decades of civil war.
The Petroleum Revenue Management Bill was approved in final reading late in July and is now waiting for Kiir's approval, Henry Odwar, head of the petroleum and mining committee, told.
He said the bill which Western donors have long urged - will set out rules on how the government can spend oil revenues, the main source of its budget.
Odwar gave no details but previous versions of the bill show that up to 10% of the revenues will have go to a new future generation fund, a nest egg for the time when oil will run out. Part of the money must also go to oil-producing communities.
Diplomats see the bill as key to start legislation and transparency in the oil sector - there is so far almost no data available how oil revenues are being spent, with some of the money ending up in corruption. Business deals are often handed out by officials without tenders or clear rules.
Western oil firms mostly shun South Sudan, a war-torn country which seceded from Sudan in 2011 after decades of conflict with Khartoum.
Mainly Chinese, Indian and Malaysian firms operate in South Sudan, which used to pump some 300 000 barrels a day until the government turned off wells in 2012 in a row with Sudan through which all exports must go.
Cross-border flows resumed in April with much lower volumes but Sudan has threatened to close the export pipelines in a conflict over alleged rebel support.
South Sudan hopes to explore with the help of France's Total and U.S. firm Exxon a large area in Jonglei state but rebel and tribal violence has made it impossible to start. It also hopes for a foreign investor to build an alternative pipeline through Kenya or Djibouti to end dependency on Sudan's infrastructure.

 

World tourism shows surprise surge


International tourist numbers surged by 5.2% to nearly half a billion people worldwide in the first half of 2013, beating earlier expectations, the United Nation's World Tourism Organisation said Monday.
Some 494 million international tourists spent at least one night abroad in the first six months of the year, the Madrid-based agency said in a report of preliminary results for the period.
As a result of the "robust" performance, the WTO said it was boosting its 2013 forecast. After originally tipping growth of three to four percent for the whole year, it now expects the increase to be at the higher end of that range "or to slightly exceed it".
Europe enjoyed growth of 5.1% in international tourist numbers in the six months, it said.
The Asia-Pacific region reported growth of 6.2% including an 11.6% surge in tourists going to Southeast Asia.
But results were weaker than anticipated in the Americas, which posted growth of just 2.2%.
International tourist numbers grew 3.1% in North America, but South America reported growth of just 0.3% and the Caribbean had growth of a meagre 0.1 percent.
In Africa, international tourist arrivals rose by 3.8%.
In the Middle East, tourist numbers soared by 12.9%, but these figures should be viewed "with caution" because of uneven results and limited data, the report said.

Greece plans market return


Greece could test market confidence in the cash-strapped country by mounting a new government debt auction in the second half of 2014 if the nation manages to return to economic growth, Greek Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras said Monday.
"That would be a great success, which would allow us to test the market with a new bond issue in the second half of 2014," Stournaras told the German business daily Handelsblatt.
He said that the size of the auction was likely to be small, perhaps less than €3bn ($4bn).
Greece has been stuck in a recession for six consecutive years as it battles to cut high debt and deficit levels through steep cuts in public spending and tough economic reforms.
Inspectors from the troika of the International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank (ECB) and European Commission are expected to travel to Athens at the beginning of September to determine whether the government is able to generate the revenue needed to meet its 2015-2016 budget targets.
Last week, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble admitted that Greece would probably need a third bailout. Germany carried the bulk of the weight of the previous two rescue packages.
On Sunday, Stournaras agreed that a new bailout might be necessary, but the amount would be lower than previous aid packages.
"If there is a need for further support to Greece, it will be in the amount of about €10bns," newspaper Proto Thema quoted him as saying.
He also ruled out any new austerity conditions to be attached to the bailout.
Athens received its first bailout of €110bn in May 2010, followed by another €140bn in 2012.
Following its implementation of austerity measures, Greece is set to receive another bailout payment of €5.8bn by the end of September. It will be eligible for another €1bn in October if it meets the troika's conditions.
Stournaras joined other leading European figures, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in ruling out a second round of debt relief for Athens.
"Debt relief that results in us being in the same situation in five years time would be counterproductive and would send the wrong signal to countries receiving aid," ECB governing council member Jens Weidmann told Handelsblatt Monday.
Weidmann is also head of Germany's central bank, the Bundesbank.

Violence stifles Iraq's economic promise


In the past month, bombs exploding down the street from Fawzy Hassan's snack shop in central Baghdad have frightened away many customers, and those who do still come to stock up on fruit, potato chips and candy are spending less than before.
"People bought one kilo before - now they only buy half," said the 73-year-old Hassan, who has worked on the street since he was 10 years old. "People are suffering financially because year after year, making a living gets more difficult."
Such gloom underlines a deterioration in Iraq's economic prospects over recent months. A year ago, many Iraqis were optimistic that a long, oil-fuelled boom that would raise living standards and, over the next decade, narrow the prosperity gap between Iraq and its wealthy Gulf Arab neighbours.
Now, rising political and sectarian violence is forcing businessmen to scale back investment plans and economists to cut growth forecasts. The promise of the country's vast oil wealth has not disappeared, but realising that promise is proving slower and more painful than hoped.
"The security situation has killed the economy, investment, reconstruction and public services in Iraq," said lawmaker Nahida al-Dayani, a member of the economic and investment committee in the national parliament.
Prices fluctuate chaotically and money is not being properly invested by the state, said analyst Maijd al-Swari from the Iraqi Economic Forum, a research body.
He thinks one of the main problems is personal consumption, which should be a motor for the economy but has remained relatively sluggish even as economic output has grown - perhaps because worried Iraqis are saving instead of spending. Some savings are sent abroad for safety, to countries such as Jordan.
"Iraqis are not motivated to carry out normal daily social and economic activities," he said.
Potential
The country has one of the biggest reserves of crude oil in the world and production has increased rapidly over the decade since the U.S. invasion in 2003, causing gross domestic product per capita to more than quadruple to $6,300 in 2012, according to the International Monetary Fund.
The growth was due in part to an improvement in security, as authorities clamped down on bomb attacks and other militant violence. Economic expansion raised hopes for a virtuous circle in which rising living standards and the reduction in violence would reinforce each other.
This year has diminished those hopes. A Sunni insurgency and other violence have revived; once again, Baghdad often wakes up to the sound of explosions, wailing sirens and police helicopters. National death tolls from sectarian violence this summer have reached around 1 000 people a month, the highest for five years.
The impact on day-to-day business activity can be seen at the checkpoints which have proliferated around Baghdad, slowing traffic and sending cars on winding, time-wasting journeys.
Iraqis are again avoiding crowded shopping areas prone to bomb attacks. This is obvious on the streets of Karada, an upmarket Baghdad district on the banks of the Tigris River.
"There is no one here because of the security situation," said 46-year-old government official Zainab Zukuk, browsing open-air garment stalls with her daughter. "We plan to go home immediately because we are worried. This is a sensitive place."
Poor security in urban areas might have only a minor impact on the economy as a whole if Iraq's oil industry were unaffected. But the insurgents have begun to target the industry because of its strategic role in the economy.
Iraq's oil exports reached 2.62 million barrels per day last November, the highest level in decades, and the country hopes to increase them eventually to as high as 6 million bpd. But security and maintenance problems mean they have stopped rising and totalled about 2.54 million bpd this month, below the government's target for this year of 2.9 million bpd.
One of the main reasons for the fall is damage inflicted by insurgents on the Kirkuk pipeline, built in the 1970s to bring 1.6 million bpd to the Turkish Mediterranean port of Ceyhan. The pipeline has been attacked at least six times this month.
Partly because of the security crisis, economists have gradually scaled back their estimates of Iraq's future growth. In April 2012, the IMF predicted Iraqi GDP growth of 13.5% in 2013 and 11.0% in 2014; it now forecasts rates of 9.0% and 8.4% for those years.
Trickle-down
Such growth is still well above the pace of expansion of Iraq's population, so thanks to oil, the country as a whole may continue to get richer in coming years as long as a minimum level of security exists to keep basic infrastructure operating most of the time.
Oil exports mean the country's external position is comfortable enough to avoid heavy pressure on its currency; the IMF estimates Iraq's foreign reserves at about $70bn, covering 10 months of imports much higher than levels of three or four months for struggling states such as Egypt and Tunisia.
So even if security continues to worsen, Iraq may avoid the balance of payments and state budget crises suffered by other, resource-poor Arab countries caught up in political unrest.
But the violence may hurt Iraq's long-term prospects by preventing wealth from spreading through society. Distracted by the security challenge and by partisan political feuding, the government can do little to improve education, housing and other infrastructure - policies which are needed to reduce unemployment and poverty.
"The positive trend in oil production and exports contrasts with the weakening economic governance deriving from an increasingly difficult political process and worsening security," the IMF said in a report.
Unemployment was officially estimated at 11% in 2011 but the IMF said actual levels were likely to be considerably higher, especially among the young. About 40% of the population is under 15, and if these people do not find jobs in coming years, political tensions may worsen further.
In south Baghdad, taxi driver Ahmed Abul Hussein said he was struggling to make ends meet because he spent so much of his time in traffic jams caused by checkpoints. A journey costing a passenger just 6 or 7 dollars can take over an hour, he said.
"Sometimes I am not able to earn back the amount that I paid for the fuel," the 44-year-old said. "But this is the only way I can earn a livelihood for my family."

China oil executive probed for graft - report


Chinese authorities are investigating a top official of the country's largest oil and gas producer for "discipline violations", state media said Monday, using a term that typically refers to corruption.
The Communist Party's graft watchdog was investigating Wang Yongchun, a vice-president of state-owned China National Petroleum (CNPC), the official Xinhua news agency reported.
The brief report gave no details of the allegations against Wang, beyond saying he was suspected of "severe" violations of party discipline.
Wang is also general manager of the Daqing Oilfield Co, which manages China's largest oilfield. He is one of five vice-presidents of CNPC, according to its website.
The announcement came as the trial of disgraced politician Bo Xilai for bribery, embezzlement and abuse of power ended after five days of hearings.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has vowed to crack down on corruption at all levels of the government, calling graft a threat to the future of the ruling Communist party.
But critics say a significant effort to reduce corruption would require increased transparency from the ultra-secretive party, as well as a loosening of controls on the media and courts.
Wang, a senior petroleum engineer, became general manager of the Daqing company in 2009 and a CNPC vice=president in 2011.
He has over 30 years experience in the industry, earlier working at another oil field in the northeastern province of Jilin, according to the CNPC website.

EU's Mugabe sanctions depend on poll verdict


The European Union said it will review relations with Zimbabwe because of its "serious concerns" about the election, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said on Thursday. Its verdict on the vote will be crucial to a decision on whether it continues to ease sanctions.
The EU in March eased most sanctions against Zimbabwe after the country's voters approved a new constitution which paved the way for the July 31 election, but kept President Robert Mugabe and nine of his closest associates on the list.
Mugabe and prominent members of his Zanu-PF party, which won a two-thirds majority in the July poll, are the targets of financial and travel sanctions imposed by the United States and the European Union. These were applied by Washington and Brussels to punish alleged election-rigging and abuses of power.
Britain said last week Mugabe's re-election could not be deemed credible without an independent investigation into allegations of voting irregularities.
US officials also said the July 31 election was flawed and Washington had no plans to loosen sanctions until there were signs of change in the country.
Mugabe threatened "tit-for-tat" retaliation against companies from Britain and the United States on Sunday if the Western nations persisted in pressuring his government with sanctions and what he called "harassment".
Mugabe's latest verbal broadside against his main Western critics followed their questioning of his re-election in a July 31 vote that his rival Morgan Tsvangirai denounced as a "coup by ballot" which he said involved widespread vote-rigging.
Mugabe, who at 89 is Africa's oldest leader, has rejected the fraud allegations and was sworn in on Thursday for a new five-year term in the southern African nation that he has ruled since its independence from Britain in 1980.
"They should not continue to harass us, the British and Americans," he told supporters at the funeral of an air force officer.
"We have not done anything to their companies here, the British have several companies in this country, and we have not imposed any controls, any sanctions against them, but time will come when we will say well, tit-for-tat, you hit me I hit you."
British companies in Zimbabwe include banking groups Standard Chartered and Barclays. These are already the target of a its indigenisation policies which require them to cede a majority stake to black Zimbabweans.
The policy has also been applied to foreign mining houses in the mineral-rich country, including those owned by South African companies such as Impala Platinum.
The United States has a far more limited corporate presence in Zimbabwe than Britain.
Mugabe still enjoys support in Africa for his role in the liberation guerrilla war that helped end white-minority rule in what was formerly Rhodesia, and led to its independence.
He frequently accuses his critics of racism and of wanting to recolonise Zimbabwe. "They think, we the blacks are inferior, they are superior. But in Zimbabwe we will never accept that a white man, merely because he is white is superior, no. We will chase them away," Mugabe said about Western powers on Sunday.

US new-home sales fall in July


Sales of new homes in the United States fell in July and June's strong data was revised much lower, the Commerce Department said on Friday.
Dimming the picture somewhat of a recovering housing market, the department's newest data put July new-home sales at an annual pace of 394 000, down from June's 455 000.
June's number was originally reported at a five-year high pace of 497 000, which fueled confidence that home-buyers were shrugging off higher mortgage rates.
The lower numbers on Friday suggested however that the rise in rates might be impacting the market.
The number of homes on the market jumped to a 5.2 months' supply at the current sales pace, compared to a 4.3-4.5 ratio over the previous quarter.
But July sales were still up 6.8% from a year earlier.
Sales fell in all regions, though the north-east appeared relatively stronger.
The average sales price rose to $322 700, compared to the 2012 full-year average of $292 200.

Food worth $6.8bn rots in India each year


Agriculture minister Sharad Pawar said on Friday that food grains, fruits and vegetables worth $6.8bn go to waste in India every year because of inadequate storage facilities.
Pawar said the country's storage requirement was 61.3 million tons against the current capacity of around 29 million tons, citing a report commissioned last year.
"The present gap is around 32 million tons," he said in the upper house of the parliament, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.
Pawar said the government had initiated various steps to encourage the creation of new storage capacity, which is in focus as the ruling Congress party rolls out a massive new food programme to feed the poor.
The Food Security law, which the government is attempting to steer through parliament, will offer subsidised grains to nearly 70% of the population, or more than 800 million people.
Nearly two-thirds of India's 1.2 billion population still depends on agriculture for their livelihood and the government is the country's biggest purchaser of produce through its centralised procurement system.

Crashing markets spell trouble for India


The collapse of the rupee is derailing India's hopes of raising more than $6bn from the sale of stakes in state-run firms, jeopardising a key plank of Finance Minister P Chidambaram's blueprint to reverse the country's economic malaise.
Investor confidence has evaporated amid fears over the rising cost of funding India's gaping current account deficit, prompting New Delhi to delay plans to raise much-needed funds through partial privatisations, finance ministry sources said.
Hit by the U S Federal Reserve's preparations to wind down monetary stimulus, which is driving up borrowing costs globally, India's rupee has lost 17% since May - touching an all-time low of 65.56 to the dollar on Thursday - and the stock market is close to its lowest in 12 months.
"In the current situation, we cannot go to the market. We may have to wait for some more time before the market stabilises," said an official who attended a meeting with the finance minister on Monday to plan for the next three months.
Three weeks ago the cabinet deferred a decision on selling an 11% stake in hydropower producer NHPC, which it had hoped would raise $300m, after the power ministry raised concerns it would be undervalued in the current market.
Chidambaram announced in February a target of 400 billion rupees ($6.2bn) for this fiscal year through partial sell-offs of state-run firms, as part of his efforts to stave off a threatened ratings downgrade by reducing the fiscal deficit to 4.8% of gross domestic product.
His ministry has not officially abandoned the target - which many private sector economists already considered optimistic and is hopeful conditions will improve before the financial year ends next March.
The top official from the finance ministry's divestment department, Ravi Mathur, is on a tour this week to Singapore and Malaysia to drum up investor interest in the stake sales and in a proposed exchange-traded fund of state-run companies.
"We need a short window of two months to raise the funds," a senior government official with direct knowledge of the stake-sale programme said. He asked not to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.
"No one can say with certainty for how long the market will remain volatile," he said, adding that if it stabilised by the end of next month, the government could sell stakes in companies in October and November.
Currency slide
Past experience, however, shows that hitting the stake-sale target might be difficult. Similar goals were missed in each of the last three fiscal years, when market conditions were better.
India raised 239.56 billion rupees in fiscal 2012/13 against an initial target of 300 billion, and 138.94 billion rupees in the previous year against a target of 400 billion.
While a weak rupee makes Indian assets more affordable to foreign buyers, with no end in sight to the current crash rupee assets bought now will likely lose value in dollar terms.
Currency weakness particularly reduces the attractiveness of Indian Oil Corporation (IOC). Sales of shares in IOC and Coal India Limited were expected to raise the bulk of the total stake sale target for this year.
IOC, the country's biggest refiner and retailer, sells fuels at state-set lower prices and gets partial compensation for the revenue losses through federal subsidies. However, because of the rupee's slide, its oil import bill has risen sharply, which has derailed plans to end subsidies on diesel by June 2013.
IOC's shares have dropped 30% since the beginning of May, when the rupee began its descent.
"All our oil companies now face difficult times," another finance ministry official said, noting it would not be easy to sell the stake in IOC because of the growing revenue losses.
In this fiscal year, which began in April, the government has so far raised $203m by selling stakes in seven companies, including Hindustan Copper, MMTC Indian Tourism Development Corp. and Neyveli Lignite.
Union pushback
Plans to sell a 10% stake in Coal India have already been scaled back to 5% because of resistance from unions that now oppose any privatisation of the world's largest coal company. They plan a three-day strike next month to stop the 5 percent sale from going ahead.
"Maybe the process (stake sale) itself might get delayed. (It) may not take place unless the market looks up," Coal India's personnel and industrial relations director, R. Mohan Das, told.
In June, Chidambaram said the government planned to raise nearly 200 billion rupees ($3.15bn) from the sale of the 10% stake in Coal India alone. Now the government could expect to raise just $2bn jointly from the sales of Coal India and IOC stakes, given current market valuations.
The cabinet approved the IOC share sale this month, the officials said. Divestments in Hindustan Aeronautics and Bharat Heavy Electricals before March 2014 are also key to the government's plans.

Radiation spots found at quake-hit plant


The operator of Japan's crippled Fukushima nuclear plant said on Thursday new spots of high radiation had been found near storage tanks holding highly contaminated water, raising fear of fresh leaks as the disaster goes from bad to worse.
The announcement comes after Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) said this week contaminated water with dangerously high levels of radiation was leaking from a storage tank.
A tsunami crashed into the Fukushima Daiichi power plant north of Tokyo on March 11, 2011, causing fuel-rod meltdowns at three reactors, radioactive contamination of air, sea and food and triggering the evacuation of 160,000 people.
It was the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl in 1986 and no one seems to know how to bring the crisis to an end.
In an inspection carried out following the revelation of the leakage, high radiation readings - 100 millisieverts per hour and 70 millisieverts per hour - were recorded at the bottom of two tanks in a different part of the plant, Tepco said.
Although no puddles were found nearby and there were no noticeable changes in water levels in the tanks, the possibility of stored water having leaked out cannot be ruled out, a Tokyo Electric spokesman said.
The confirmed leakage prompted Japan's nuclear watchdog to say it feared the disaster was "in some respect" beyond Tepco's ability to cope.
The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said on Wednesday it viewed the situation at Fukushima "seriously" and was ready to help if called upon.
China said it was "shocked" to hear contaminated water was still leaking from the plant, and urged Japan to provide information "in a timely, thorough and accurate way".

Monday, August 19, 2013

NEWS,19.08.2013



Rare diamond to go under the hammer


A rare round blue diamond will go under the hammer in Hong Kong in October, with auctioneers hoping the sale will fetch a record-breaking $19m despite fears over the slowing Chinese economy.

Auction house Sotheby's expect the 7.59-carat fancy vivid blue diamond, which is about the size of a shirt button, to set a new record for price-per-carat.

Quek Chin Yeow, Sotheby Asia's deputy chairperson, said Hong Kong was the natural venue to sell the gem, known as "The Premier Blue", with collectors expected to fly in from all over the world.

"While there is a slowdown (in Chinese economy), the number of top-level collectors are still there," he told AFP.

"We have been selling very well in
Hong Kong."

Jewellery auctions

Hong Kong has become a centre for jewellery auctions thanks to growing wealth in China and other parts of the region, as well as the region's increasing taste for art.

But there are fears for the future of the Chinese economy, the world's second largest, where growth fell to 7.8% in 2012 - its slowest pace in 13 years.

Blue diamonds seldom hit the market and have been coveted by royals and celebrities for centuries, while a round cut is rarely used in coloured stones because of the high wastage.

The most famous example of a blue diamond is the "Hope Diamond", which was bought by King Louis XIV of
France in the 17th Century.

The term "fancy" is used to describe a diamond of intense colour, while a gem's saturation grading ranges from light to vivid for coloured diamonds.

The Premier Blue will go up for auction on October 7. Quek said the owner wanted to remain anonymous.

In April, a rare 5.3-carat fancy deep-blue diamond was sold for £6.2m ($9.5m) at a
London auction, then setting a record for price-per-carat at $1.8m.

China bans more dairy products


More New Zealand milk products sold to China have been banned after elevated levels of nitrates were found, raising further concerns over quality and testing in the world's largest dairy exporter in the wake of a contamination scare earlier this month.
New Zealand's agricultural regulator said on Monday it has revoked export certificates for four China bound consignments of lactoferrin manufactured by Westland Milk Products after higher  than acceptable nitrate levels were found by tests in China.
Two of the four consignments had been shipped to China but had not reached consumers, New Zealand's Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI) said.
"Any food safety risk to Chinese consumers is negligible because the quantities of lactoferrin used in consumer products was very small, meaning the nitrate levels in those products would easily be within acceptable levels", Scott Gallacher, the acting director-general of the MPI, said in a statement.
The announcement comes just weeks after Westland's much bigger competitor, Fonterra, said some of its dairy ingredients were contaminated with a botulism-causing bacteria. This prompted a recall of infant formula products, sports drinks and other products in China, New Zealand and other Asia-Pacific nations.
"All of the product has been located, none of it has entered the retail food chain," Westland Chief Executive Rod Quin told . "We're well aware of the wider context of the issue and related concerns, so we've acted to make sure the product doesn't go any further."
China's top quality watchdog said it had halted all imports of the product from Westland and asked other New Zealand dairy companies exporting lactoferrin to provide nitrate test reports.
The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine of China urged the New Zealand government to thoroughly scrutinise its dairy companies as well as their products to ensure the safety of exports to China, New Zealand's top dairy market.
Affected batches
The four consignments were derived from two affected batches of lactoferrin, a naturally occurring protein found in milk, manufactured by Westland at its Hokitika factory on the country's South Island.
Initial investigations pointed to contamination by cleaning products which contain nitrates that were not property flushed from the plant, Quin said.
Privately owned Westland makes about 120 000 tonnes of dairy product each year, exporting the majority. Its production pales in comparison with that of Fonterra, which exports 2.5 million tonnes of product.
ANZ agricultural economist Con Williams said that the 390 kg of affected Westland product was much smaller than the 38 tonnes of contaminated product produced by Fonterra. As a result, he expected it would have limited impact on global demand for New Zealand dairy products.
"The timing isn't ideal. There's heightened concern around food safety issues at the moment especially in the dairy sector in light of the Fonterra issue two weeks ago," Williams said.
"But in terms of the actual issues, it doesn't seem to be substantial ... It looks like only a very small amount of product was affected and it doesn't seem to be a food safety issue."
The two batches of lactoferrin showed nitrate levels of 610 and 2 198 parts per million, respectively, above the New Zealand maximum limit of 150 parts per million.
Westland exported one batch directly to a Chinese distributor, which sold the product on as an ingredient for other dairy products. The second batch was supplied to New Zealand's Tatua Co-operative Dairy Company, and also exported to China.
"MPI, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade and the companies concerned are working closely with the Chinese authorities on this issue," Gallacher said.
There was no affected lactoferrin used in products in New Zealand or exported elsewhere.
New Zealand relies on diary exports for about a quarter of its NZ$46bn ($37bn) in annual export earnings.

New Zealand plans tainted dairy probe


New Zealand on Monday announced plans for a government inquiry into how ingredients made by dairy giant Fonterra became contaminated with a botulism-causing bacteria, as the country tries to salvage its reputation as an exporter of safe agricultural products.
The inquiry, to be held alongside two internal Fonterra investigations and another by the country's agricultural regulator, will examine how the potentially contaminated products entered the international market and whether adequate regulatory practices were in place to deal with the issue.
"This will provide the answers needed to the questions that have been raised about this incident, both domestically and internationally," said Primary Industries Minister Nathan Guy, who is leading the inquiry along with Food Safety Minister Nikki Kaye.
"It is also an important step in reassuring our trading partners that we take these issues seriously," he said in a statement.
The contamination announced earlier this month has led to product recalls in countries from China to Saudi Arabia.
Fonterra, the world's largest dairy exporter, has come under attack at home and abroad for dragging its feet in disclosing the discovery of the bacteria.
Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings welcomed the inquiry, saying in the statement that the company would provide all necessary information.
The inquiry will be expected to provide an interim report in around three months.
New Zealand depends on the dairy industry for a quarter of its total exports. China is a major export market for New Zealand's dairy products.
Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully is visiting Beijing this week in to smooth relations with the country's biggest milk powder customer, and Prime Minister John Key has said he plans to visit China later this year to discuss the contamination issue after the inquiry results are complete.

Greece sacks privatisation agency chief


Greece dismissed the chairperson of its privatisation agency on Sunday after a newspaper reported that he travelled on the private plane of a businessman who just bought a state company.
Stelios Stavridis is the second head of HRADF to leave in less than six months, reigniting controversy around Greece's ailing privatisation programme which is a key part of its international bailout.
Delays and privatisation receipt shortfalls are a constant headache for the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, which bankroll Greece's €240bn rescue.
The lenders said last month that they would review the way HRADF was operating, after it emerged that the agency would miss its 2013 revenue target by about €1bn.
"Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras asked today for the resignation of HRADF chairperson Stelios Stavridis," the finance ministry said in a brief statement.
A finance ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told that Stavridis's resignation was effective immediately.
The official said the dismissal followed a report in Proto Thema on Saturday that Stavridis travelled last week on the private plane of shipowner Dimitris Melissanidis, a major shareholder of a Greek-Czech consortium which in May agreed to buy a 33% stake in state gambling firm OPAP.
Stavridis was not immediately available for comment.
According to the newspaper report, he admitted he used Melissanidis's plane to travel to his holiday home.
"Melissanidis, who was travelling to France, offered to take me with him to accommodate me," he was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Stavridis took the flight immediately the signing of an agreement to finalise the €652m OPAP deal, Proto Thema said.
HRADF chief executive Yannis Emiris told he was keeping his post and that Greece's ailing privatisation programme would not suffer from Stavridis's resignation.
"There will be absolutely no delays to the programme," he said, rejecting the idea that the OPAP deal might be reversed as a result of Stavridis's resignation.
The finance ministry official confirmed the OPAP deal would not be affected and the Stavridis's resignation was for "ethical reasons".
Stavridis's predecessor Takis Athanasopoulos stepped down after he was charged by a prosecutor with breach of duty over his former role as chairman of a state utility.

China wants fewer free trade zone curbs


China hopes to suspend its laws governing foreign investment in proposed free trade zones, the cabinet said, in a sign the world's second-biggest economy could open further to foreign competition.
The State Council, China's cabinet, will ask senior members of the National People's Congress, or parliament, for the power to suspend laws and regulations governing both foreign-owned companies and joint ventures between Chinese and foreign companies in free trade zones, including Shanghai, the cabinet said on its website.
The move is aimed at "accelerating transformation of the government's role ... and innovating ways of (further) opening up (to foreign investment)," according to the statement, seen on Sunday. It set no timetable, and gave no further details.
Foreign direct investment in China slowed in 2012 but reversed its decline in the first quarter of this year as confidence improved.
China attracted $38.3 billion in foreign direct investment in the first four months of 2013, up 1.2 percent from the same period in 2012.
China's financial centre, Shanghai, will test yuan convertibility and cross-border capital flows in the free trade zone pilot programme.
The country's new leaders have signalled they want to speed the process of making the yuan fully convertible over the next few years, as part of efforts to boost the currency's use in trade and support wider financial reforms.
Shanghai officials are keen to experiment with freeing up the capital account and yuan convertibility, fearing the city could be left behind as rival centres, such as Hong Kong and Taiwan, move to develop cross-border yuan financial services.
Shanghai stepped up lobbying efforts after the 2012 creation of a special trade zone in Qianhai, near the southern boomtown of Shenzhen and across from Hong Kong, where yuan convertibility is being trialled.
The Qianhai zone, administered by the central bank, the People's Bank of China, lets banks from Hong Kong offer cross-border yuan-denominated loans to mainland firms.
Other initiatives announced in 2013 include trial programmes to smooth the way for foreign firms to move funds in and out of China, cutting the need for approvals and easing bank procedure.

Investors dump India as crisis deepens


Indian policymakers are looking increasingly panicky as they battle the worst currency crisis in more than two decades, and more worryingly there is no sign their remedies are working.
The rupee lurched to a new lifetime low of 62.03 to the dollar on Friday while the benchmark share index posted its biggest one-day fall since September 2011.
"None of the policymakers' Band-Aid measures (from capital controls to tightening liquidity) seems to be working. They have not been able to turn the tide," Rajeev Malik, economist at investment house CLSA, told AFP.
"The government and the Reserve Bank of India are taking fire-fighting measures."
The rupee has lost 57% of its value against the US currency since it peaked at 39.40 rupees to the dollar in February 2008.
The currency's strength began unravelling when Lehman Brothers collapsed later that year, triggering the global financial crisis.
But pressure on the rupee has mounted in the past two years as investor alarm over a slowing economy and a ballooning current account deficit - the widest measure of trade - has grown.
Part of the reason for the currency's most recent slide - it has fallen 13% this year against the greenback - lies outside Indian policymakers' remit.
The currencies of emerging markets globally have fallen on expectations that an increasingly buoyant United States will soon roll back stimulus responsible for funnelling big investments overseas in quest of high yields.
But other reasons for the rupee's drop are home-made - failure to move fast enough on economic reform, a series of government corruption scandals, perceptions of policy paralysis and the record current account deficit, analysts say.
Since June 1, overseas funds have pulled out $11.58bn from India's stock and debt markets.
Investors worry that despite the long-term growth potential of the country of 1.2 billion people, "things are not in shape in the interim period", said investment house IDBI research head Sonam Udasi.
As the rupee's woes have deepened, authorities have responded with a clutch of measures to try to stem its decline and avert a balance-of-payments crisis.
India has painful memories of its 1991 balance of payments crisis when it failed to attract enough foreign currency and was forced to fly 47 tonnes of gold as collateral for an International Monetary Fund loan in what was seen as a national humiliation.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was finance minister at the time, was moved Saturday to rule out a repeat, saying: "There is no question of going back to the 1991 crisis."
In the past few weeks, Indian policymakers have hiked short-term interest rates, announced plans to allow state firms to raise foreign funds abroad and curbed gold imports.
They have also threatened to imposed higher duties on imported electronic appliances such as fridges, which are made locally.
But it is their most recent step - stealthily announced late Wednesday on the eve of a national holiday - that has fanned the deepest consternation.
The central bank sharply tightened controls on the amount of money firms and individuals can send abroad.
The move looked to observers like a disturbing throwback to the days before India unleashed its economic liberalisation drive in the early 1990s when Indians' access to foreign exchange was strictly limited.
Confederation of Indian Industry president Kris Gopalakrishnan criticised the move as "retrograde".
While the capital controls only apply to local individuals and firms, the restrictions may raise worries among overseas investors that they could be extended to foreign companies operating in India, analysts say.
Under the new policy, Indian individuals can send just $75,000 out of the country annually, down from $200 000 - making it tougher to pay children's overseas university fees, for example.
Companies can invest abroad only 100% of their net worth, down from 400% - though the central bank says firms can ship out more money if they give authorities a good reason for doing so.
"While the authorities aim to reduce foreign-exchange volatility, we fear they may end up sending a panic signal," Nomura economist Sonal Varma said.
There have been no signs so far of domestic capital flight but analysts say the controls may have been tightened to avert one in the face of India's troubles.
The economy expanded last year at a decade-low of five percent and indicators this year have been grim with economists warning about "stagflation" - a combination of high inflation and low growth.
With an election to be held by May 2014 and pro-market reforms divisive, there is no way the Congress government can undertake root-and-branch reforms needed to put the economy back on track, economists say.
"There is a complete lack of faith in the markets" about India's outlook, said Param Sarma, chief executive at consultancy firm NSP Forex.