CHINA GREEN julkinen
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Natural forests cover about 10 percent of China’s surface area, but few of the forests remain in a primary or pristine condition. These forests are threatened primarily by timber collection, mining, unregulated harvesting of flora for traditional Chinese medicine and excessive development related to increased tourism.…
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China's wetlands cover some 65 million hectares, ranking first in Asia and representing ten percent of the world's total wetlands. A quiet crisis is occurring however as these important waters are quickly disappearing. As a result of China's rapid economic growth in recent decades, vast swathes of China's wetlands have now disappeared.…
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With China Green, we seek to tell stories about energy, environment and climate change of both local and global magnitude. China’s efforts to “green” itself will be key to not only the success of it’s sustainable growth but also to the hope for global solutions to some of the most daunting challenges confronting mankind.…
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The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
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The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
  continue reading
 
The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
  continue reading
 
The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
  continue reading
 
The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
  continue reading
 
The number of gadgets that have become indispensable to our daily lives has increased exponentially, but the life span of our electronics is shorter than ever as they are updated frequently and tossed aside. This project is about what happens to those gadgets after they become obsolete.Kirjoittanut Ariane Wu, Michael Zhao
  continue reading
 
Documentary maker Patrick Fries' latest project — a film about melting glaciers in the Himalayas is set to air on the TV network Discovery Asia in late spring — required lugging equipment to cliffs at 17,000 feet and interviews with characters such as the "Ice Man," an engineer in the north of India who has designed man-made glaciers.…
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In Don’t Cry, Three Gorges (2010) director Chen Fu documented the work and life of Liu Gujun, captain of Wanzhou River Cleaning Unit. In2003, Liu Gujun stopped his fishing and transportation business, used his own savings and ships and started a river cleaning team, organizing fellow fishermen to collect floating garbage that covered some 10 miles …
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By empowering young populations with knowledge and passion, Dr. Jane Goodall's presence in China has helped fuel other NGOs to begin to flourish. Her message of peace has inspired young and old generations throughout the country. There are now over 600 individual Roots and Shoots groups in China working to improve social and environmental condition…
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Coal makes up 70% of China's primary energy consumption and has powered its economic engine for decades. But there are hidden costs behind this dirty fuel, both to human health and to the environment. At least a quarter million Chinese have died from coal mine accidents in China since 1949, according to official statistics. Those who do survive are…
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China's mother river, the Yellow, was known for its devastating floods in ancient times. Nowadays, however, it stops flowing all the way to the sea many days of the year. Apart from increasing demand from agricultural and industrial water usage, the water shortage can also be traced all the way to its originating streams up on the northeastern corn…
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Da Shu Xian, or Big Tree Country, in remote Sichuan Province is the site of a large sulfur mine, which produces up to 12,000 tons of sulfur a month. In the 14 years since the mine became operational up until this film was produced in 1992, pollution from the sulfur mine wiped out the area's trees that had given the county its name.…
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China may be on the cusp of a green building boom due to a growing number of private energy service companies (ESCOS) nationwide. Sohota Electric, an energy savings company in Zhuhai, Guangdong is one of those firms. Its clientele includes state television broadcaster CCTV, whose energy bill Sohota has cut by 16 percent.…
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