Impressions of New Zealand

来源 :China Pictorial | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:tshanyf
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读



  After visiting several European countries, such as Britain, Ireland, Norway, and Iceland, I paid a visit to Auckland, the largest city in New Zealand, this July. I was part of a delegation from the municipal government of Ningbo, my hometown.
  Auckland has joined hands with Ningbo to become sister cities. After two days of conducting business, I found time to experience the city.
  Auckland is known as a city of sailboats, and I indeed saw many docked in the bay. I was deeply impressed by what I saw: clean, shining boats, blue ocean, white sails, and seagulls hovering over the water. Particularly striking is the black sand beach, dubbed by National Geographic as one of the most amazing 30 vistas on earth. The beach is covered with nothing but black sand – remains of a volcanic eruption.
  Downtown Auckland has hardly any skyscrapers, and its symbolic structure is a TV tower rising above the trees. Suburban Auckland is a world of pastures – a wonderful home for cows and sheep. I will never forget a scene of sheep scattered across gentle, green slopes, bathing in the sunlight. I didn’t see any villages on the vast expanses of pastures.
  During my stay, I couldn’t help but ask myself, “What can we learn from this country?”
  New Zealand has a small population, but vast land and rich natural resources. China, conversely, has a huge population, yet disproportionate land and resources. Economic development inevitably damages the living environment, which in turn results in environmental problems.
  In my home province, Zhejiang, for instance, the government has launched campaigns to tackle water issues, including sewage treatment, flood prevention and control, flood drainage, and water supply and conservation, hoping to restore the region’s beautiful waterfront scenery. Nevertheless, environmental management is a massive, daunting task that can never be accomplished overnight.
  I naturally pondered a few things that could help.
  First, China should slow its real estate development and minimize construction of skyscrapers. Housing prices have skyrocketed – too expensive for normal folks.
  Second, the country should stop overemphasizing its GDP growth percentage, which has led to excessive industrial development producing massive surpluses, polluting the environment, and exhausting natural resources. The government should let go of enterprises struggling to survive, so as to better help the healthy ones grow. Enterprises plagued with problems must teach themselves to survive on the edge, or be eliminated.
  Third, the government should pay more attention to education, starting in elementary schools, and place more emphasis on the realms of morality, patriotism, and even national defense.
  Finally, China should focus on tertiary industries, tourism in particular. It goes without saying that China has been bestowed some of the richest tourism resources on the planet: ancient civilization, long history, and profound, brilliant culture. But tourism cannot flourish with focus only on big metropolises, such as Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an, and Hangzhou. More destinations in rural China should target travelers as part of the economic restructuring of the country.
其他文献
January 30, Beijing: Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (right) and French Prime Minister Manuel Valls (left) visit an exhibition of the work of French sculptor Auguste Rodin at the National Museum of China.
期刊
Since the 1970s, Davos, a small mountain village in the Swiss Alps, has been vaulted into the global spotlight for a few days every winter as host of the World Economic Forum (WEF). This year was no e
期刊
This year marks the 120th anniversary of the First Sino-Japanese War which broke out in 1894. Although twelve decades have passed, the trauma of the war remains imprinted in Chinese memories.  The Fir
期刊
Public Policy Survey in Urban China  Public evaluation of government policies reflects public mood, which contributes to social and political stability. Understanding the public mood requires scientif
期刊
Modern and traditional, pas- sionate and conservative– it seems contradictions peacefully coexist in Taipei, the largest city in Taiwan.  Located in northern Taiwan, Taipei is the most popular tourist
期刊
The magnum opus of contem- porary Chinese dramatist Li Longyun (1948-2012), Xiaojing Hutong was created in 1981 and debuted at the Capital Theater in 1985. Set in a hutong (backstreet or alley) named
期刊
“The price is great: Only 6.9 yuan (about one dollar) per liter, even cheaper than domestic products, and it’s high quality with no additives,”commented a buyer at yhd.com, a leading e-commerce site i
期刊
In a flash, it was October 1973, and the autumn sky was clear and the air crisp. Feeling much better, Zhou Enlai decided to accompany Pierre Elliott Trudeau, prime minister of Canada, to visit Luoyang
期刊
From July to August 2014, the Ice Bucket Challenge, a campaign advocating dumping a bucket of ice water on one’s head to promote awareness of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) disease and encourage
期刊
Two years ago, Wang Jianlin, chairman of leading Chinese real estate developer Wanda Group, made a wager with Jack Ma, executive chairman of the country’s largest e-commerce firm Alibaba, as they appe
期刊