Scott Tong is a correspondent for Marketplace’s sustainability desk, with a focus on energy, environment, resources, climate, supply chain and the global economy. He services the complete portfolio of Marketplace programming and has reported on several special series including long-term U.S. job creation, U.N. climate talks in Cancun, Mexico, the Japan earthquake and tsunami, the BP oil spill one-year anniversary, and famine in the Horn of Africa. He has reported from more than a dozen countries. Tong joined Marketplace in 2004, serving most recently as the China bureau chief in Shanghai from January 2007 to July 2010. While there, he reported on a special series on the economics of one-child and the 30th anniversary of the one-child policy in China, the Beijing Olympics, the food safety scares in 2007, labor strikes, slave labor, child lead poisoning and baby-selling in China’s international adoption program. Prior to joining Marketplace, Tong worked as a producer and off-air reporter at PBS Newshour with Jim Lehrer for seven years, where he produced a special series from Iraq in 2003.  Tong received his bachelor’s degree in government from Georgetown University. A native of Poughkeepsie N.Y., Tong now lives in Arlington, Va. with his wife and three children. He’s an acknowledged soccer dad, and enjoys cooking, cycling (he bikes to work on a regular basis), and running slowly.

Features By Scott Tong

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U.S.-China trade relations could still go south

China's vice president Xi Jinping met with corporate leaders at U.S. Chamber of Commerce as part of his Washington trip. Each side has put on a smile about their economic relationship, but that hasn't hid the tensions beneath the surface.
Posted In: China, Xi Jinping, trade
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China flexes trade muscles

The state visit by Chinese VP Xi Jengpeng highlights U.S.-China cooperation -- but behind the scenes, China plays hardball.
Posted In: China, clean technology, trade, wind power, solar power
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Grand Canyon announces ban on bottled water

Waste concerns lead to a ban on bottled water at the national park despite fears that Coca-Cola, a big parks sponsor, would react badly.
Posted In: grand canyon, bottled water, Coca-cola
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Money flows across border

As Western Union earnings show, the global remittance business is at record levels.
Posted In: Western Union, remittances
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Style, reputation are big factors in buying a car

Auto makers tout gas mileage and safety to sell cars. But a big reason most buyers choose one model over another is reputation and perception.
Posted In: Auto, car
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How Apple makes its profit

Apple's formula is classic: Buy low, sell high -- over and over and over.
Posted In: apple
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Is solar energy in trouble?

Solar stocks have been plunging of late and the world's biggest solar market is tapping the brakes on sun power. Looks like a cloudy forecast ahead.
Posted In: solar, solar power
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EU, U.S. announce tougher sanctions on Iran

The hope is further isolation by freezing assets and penalizing the banks that do business with Iran.
Posted In: Oil, Iran, sanctions
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State Dept. rejects Keystone XL pipeline

If you think the decision puts an end to the debate over the controversial project, guess again.
Posted In: Keystone pipeline, Oil
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Cruise accident may leave lasting wake

The accident off the Italian coast could dissuade a key cruise industry demographic.
Posted In: cruise, Travel, travel and leisure

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