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Despite finishing in 164th position, the last on the final list, 27-year-old Ji Cheng made history by becoming the first Chinese cyclist to ever complete the Tour de France, which ran July 5-27 this year.
Ji is from Harbin in northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province. He was disabled at the age of 8 due to a traffic accident, which fractured the base of his skull and left him partially paralyzed. With his mother’s help, he learned to walk again. Ji practiced middle-distance running before shifting to cycling in 2002, eventually joining the Dutch Giant-Shimano team in 2007.
He finished 175th, in last position, at the 2012 Vuelta a Espana(Tour of Spain), though sickness prevented him from completing last year’s Giro d’Italia (Tour of Italy).
Ji said he hopes to be a pioneer for his countrymen, but it will take more than just him to change the state of cycling in China.
Putting a Stop to Land Pollution
Caixin Century Weekly July 14
According to China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP), of all the soil samples obtained at testing sites, 19.4 percent are polluted, a sharp rise from the 10-percent pollution rate of the 1990s. This is undoubtedly bad news for China, whose per-capita arable land is only 40 percent of the world’s average.
In April, the Ministry of Land and Resources in cooperation with the MEP enumerated three major ways polluted soil harms the country. First, it leads to the decline of grain output and quality, and most importantly, for those ingesting this produce over an extended period of time, long-term health concerns. Second, polluted soil in turn contaminates the surrounding environment and further affects human respiratory and physical health. Finally, polluted soil jeopardizes China’s ecological environment.
The pollution of soil, particularly in arable land, is so terrible that work must begin now if there’s any hope of repairing the damage done. However, the restoration of polluted arable land is a very difficult project both technically and financially. So far, there has not been a successful land reclamation project anywhere in the world that can be emulated.
The good news, however, is that earlier this year, the MEP passed an action plan on the prevention and treatment of soil pollution. Many detailed measures are mentioned in the plan to prevent soil pollution and move forward with land protection, which are designed to reverse the deterioration of soil pollution and bring contamination under effective control by 2020. Concerns Over GM Seed Monopoly
South Reviews July 29
Current disputes regarding genetically modified (GM) food focus on the safety of such agricultural products. However, another equally important issue that is often overlooked is GM food-related intellectual property rights (IPR), and IPR-based business expansion.
Species across the globe should not be subject to anyone. Those modifying the genes of certain species and applying for patents, however, can now claim these species as their private property, forcing others to pay for access to them.
Traditional methods like hybrid technology are slow to bring profits, but GM technology is quick in producing new species. Pesticide-resistant genes found in bacteria can be transplanted into corn, beans, potatoes and many other crops, and in this way seed companies can apply for more than one patent. This in turn brings in long-term profits.
Since the 1990s, when GM crops were first allowed to be used for commercial purposes, pesticide resistance has been the focus of the majority of GM patent applications. Comparatively, other scientific achievements in seed research are rarely seen. This is harmful to the overall biological science behind agriculture.
Worse still, as a result of the monopoly over seed research and its market, farmers will have to struggle against heavier economic pressures due to rising agricultural costs. They will someday find most of the natural seeds they are familiar with disappearing from the market, with only a few expensive GM species left in their place.
Humans or Dogs at Fault?
People’s Daily July 29
In the past decade or so, the number of dogs kept as pets has increased sharply across China. Now, people are raising dogs not just for their company, but also as part of a growing trend in pet ownership. It is important to remember that dogs are not human beings—they require human care and training. Some dogs are dangerous by nature, and cannot control their basic impulses. Thus, if owners do not or cannot control them, these pets may pose a risk to others.
In cities, dogs live together with their masters in apartment buildings and share the community at large with other dogs. It is not surprising that disputes related to dogs are happening more and more frequently. The major reason behind this is that many dog owners care only about their own rights, ignoring the effects their pets might have on others. Without the attention of owners, dogs pollute the urban environment and might even attack other dogs or people. Therefore, training a dog to make it safe is the responsibility of its owner. The government, for its part, should strengthen management of dog ownership. The lack of control over incompetent owners is the first issue that must be fixed. Tens of millions of dogs are now living together with hundreds of millions of people. In order to make the overall situation more beneficial for both humans and dogs, governmental dog ownership management is absolutely necessary.
FORERUNNER IN PRIVATE ROCKET LAUNCH
Hu Zhenyu, founder and CEO of China’s first private rocket-launching firm Link Space, has recently gained wide attention for his lofty goals.
The Shenzhen-based company aims to put a launch vehicle with a diameter of more than 3 meters into space by 2021. Its business plan also envisions pointto-point sub-orbital manned transportation, which would enable passengers to fly from Hong Kong to California in about 30 minutes.
The 21-year-old Hu successfully launched a sounding rocket to a height of 4 km in a desert in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in July last year, the first such rocket made by university students in China. He is from Jiujiang City, east China’s Jiangxi Province, and graduated from the South China University of Technology in June.
Despite his ambitious plans, Hu’s company is facing serious obstacles, such as inadequate funding and blurry government regulations regarding rocket launches by individuals or civil organizations.
“Around 83 percent of Chinese doctors feel excessive pressure during work hours and more than 90 percent do not get enough sleep.”
Lin Hua, a doctor with the Orthopedics Department of Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital, speaking about a survey conducted by several Chinese medical organizations, on July 30
“The next financial center might be in Asia, likely in China. China is becoming more important. In the past, Chinese students went overseas to pursue studies; now some international students choose to come to China to get in touch with the possible next center.”
James Warner, Managing Director of Leadership and Talent Consulting at the China branch of Korn Ferry, a global executive search firm, on July 28
“Job security and stability are still the reasons that college graduates favor state-owned enterprises (soEs). However, private companies are becoming increasingly attractive to job seekers who have three to five years’ experience”.
Zhao Zifeng, Director of the human resources company ChinaHR.com’s Research Institute, drawing on his institute’s report that 36 percent of university students and recent graduates consider SOEs the best employers, on July 25
“Among many factors, the change in Chinese people’s eating habits over the past few decades is taking its toll on people’s health and contributing to increasing weight and obesity problems.”
Zhaoping Li, professor of medicine and Director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of California, Los Angeles, in a recent interview with China Daily
Ji is from Harbin in northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province. He was disabled at the age of 8 due to a traffic accident, which fractured the base of his skull and left him partially paralyzed. With his mother’s help, he learned to walk again. Ji practiced middle-distance running before shifting to cycling in 2002, eventually joining the Dutch Giant-Shimano team in 2007.
He finished 175th, in last position, at the 2012 Vuelta a Espana(Tour of Spain), though sickness prevented him from completing last year’s Giro d’Italia (Tour of Italy).
Ji said he hopes to be a pioneer for his countrymen, but it will take more than just him to change the state of cycling in China.
Putting a Stop to Land Pollution
Caixin Century Weekly July 14
According to China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP), of all the soil samples obtained at testing sites, 19.4 percent are polluted, a sharp rise from the 10-percent pollution rate of the 1990s. This is undoubtedly bad news for China, whose per-capita arable land is only 40 percent of the world’s average.
In April, the Ministry of Land and Resources in cooperation with the MEP enumerated three major ways polluted soil harms the country. First, it leads to the decline of grain output and quality, and most importantly, for those ingesting this produce over an extended period of time, long-term health concerns. Second, polluted soil in turn contaminates the surrounding environment and further affects human respiratory and physical health. Finally, polluted soil jeopardizes China’s ecological environment.
The pollution of soil, particularly in arable land, is so terrible that work must begin now if there’s any hope of repairing the damage done. However, the restoration of polluted arable land is a very difficult project both technically and financially. So far, there has not been a successful land reclamation project anywhere in the world that can be emulated.
The good news, however, is that earlier this year, the MEP passed an action plan on the prevention and treatment of soil pollution. Many detailed measures are mentioned in the plan to prevent soil pollution and move forward with land protection, which are designed to reverse the deterioration of soil pollution and bring contamination under effective control by 2020. Concerns Over GM Seed Monopoly
South Reviews July 29
Current disputes regarding genetically modified (GM) food focus on the safety of such agricultural products. However, another equally important issue that is often overlooked is GM food-related intellectual property rights (IPR), and IPR-based business expansion.
Species across the globe should not be subject to anyone. Those modifying the genes of certain species and applying for patents, however, can now claim these species as their private property, forcing others to pay for access to them.
Traditional methods like hybrid technology are slow to bring profits, but GM technology is quick in producing new species. Pesticide-resistant genes found in bacteria can be transplanted into corn, beans, potatoes and many other crops, and in this way seed companies can apply for more than one patent. This in turn brings in long-term profits.
Since the 1990s, when GM crops were first allowed to be used for commercial purposes, pesticide resistance has been the focus of the majority of GM patent applications. Comparatively, other scientific achievements in seed research are rarely seen. This is harmful to the overall biological science behind agriculture.
Worse still, as a result of the monopoly over seed research and its market, farmers will have to struggle against heavier economic pressures due to rising agricultural costs. They will someday find most of the natural seeds they are familiar with disappearing from the market, with only a few expensive GM species left in their place.
Humans or Dogs at Fault?
People’s Daily July 29
In the past decade or so, the number of dogs kept as pets has increased sharply across China. Now, people are raising dogs not just for their company, but also as part of a growing trend in pet ownership. It is important to remember that dogs are not human beings—they require human care and training. Some dogs are dangerous by nature, and cannot control their basic impulses. Thus, if owners do not or cannot control them, these pets may pose a risk to others.
In cities, dogs live together with their masters in apartment buildings and share the community at large with other dogs. It is not surprising that disputes related to dogs are happening more and more frequently. The major reason behind this is that many dog owners care only about their own rights, ignoring the effects their pets might have on others. Without the attention of owners, dogs pollute the urban environment and might even attack other dogs or people. Therefore, training a dog to make it safe is the responsibility of its owner. The government, for its part, should strengthen management of dog ownership. The lack of control over incompetent owners is the first issue that must be fixed. Tens of millions of dogs are now living together with hundreds of millions of people. In order to make the overall situation more beneficial for both humans and dogs, governmental dog ownership management is absolutely necessary.
FORERUNNER IN PRIVATE ROCKET LAUNCH
Hu Zhenyu, founder and CEO of China’s first private rocket-launching firm Link Space, has recently gained wide attention for his lofty goals.
The Shenzhen-based company aims to put a launch vehicle with a diameter of more than 3 meters into space by 2021. Its business plan also envisions pointto-point sub-orbital manned transportation, which would enable passengers to fly from Hong Kong to California in about 30 minutes.
The 21-year-old Hu successfully launched a sounding rocket to a height of 4 km in a desert in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in July last year, the first such rocket made by university students in China. He is from Jiujiang City, east China’s Jiangxi Province, and graduated from the South China University of Technology in June.
Despite his ambitious plans, Hu’s company is facing serious obstacles, such as inadequate funding and blurry government regulations regarding rocket launches by individuals or civil organizations.
“Around 83 percent of Chinese doctors feel excessive pressure during work hours and more than 90 percent do not get enough sleep.”
Lin Hua, a doctor with the Orthopedics Department of Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital, speaking about a survey conducted by several Chinese medical organizations, on July 30
“The next financial center might be in Asia, likely in China. China is becoming more important. In the past, Chinese students went overseas to pursue studies; now some international students choose to come to China to get in touch with the possible next center.”
James Warner, Managing Director of Leadership and Talent Consulting at the China branch of Korn Ferry, a global executive search firm, on July 28
“Job security and stability are still the reasons that college graduates favor state-owned enterprises (soEs). However, private companies are becoming increasingly attractive to job seekers who have three to five years’ experience”.
Zhao Zifeng, Director of the human resources company ChinaHR.com’s Research Institute, drawing on his institute’s report that 36 percent of university students and recent graduates consider SOEs the best employers, on July 25
“Among many factors, the change in Chinese people’s eating habits over the past few decades is taking its toll on people’s health and contributing to increasing weight and obesity problems.”
Zhaoping Li, professor of medicine and Director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of California, Los Angeles, in a recent interview with China Daily