松茂竹苞网 > 焦点>>Olympics showcase China as a green development trailblazer

Olympics showcase China as a green development trailblazer

2024-09-25 16:27:24 来源:松茂竹苞网 
Illustration: Chen Xia/GTThe wonderful appearance of LEDs during the opening ceremony of the Beijing
Illustration: Chen Xia/GT

Illustration: Chen Xia/GT

The wonderful appearance of LEDs during the opening ceremony of the Beijing Winter Olympics reminded me of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. That opening ceremony used a ground-level LED screen, 3,234 square meters in area, but many parts, especially key components, were imported from abroad.
14 years later, the world's largest LED screen was unveiled at the opening of the Winter Olympics, measuring 10,552 square meters with over 40,000 LED modules, featuring ultra-high resolution of 16K, with components basically all made in China.
Of course, China's LED development, in general, is still at the midstream level. The US, Germany and Japan hold the upper reaches of cutting-edge technology. But China has established a complete production chain and a complete LED industry chain. The US, Germany and Japan's high-end technology to be applied to end products on a large scale, still needs the support of the Chinese manufacturing industry.
The LED industry in China symbolizes the status of Chinese manufacturing in the global industrial chain, and in fact, it is also why the US containment policy on China will backfire. 
The Beijing Winter Olympics are also a continuation and expansion of the Green Olympics. In 1994, I went to Lillehammer, Norway to cover the Winter Olympics, and it was because of the efforts of the Norwegians that environmental protection became a goal pursued by the international Olympic movement from that year onwards.
Twenty-eight years on, the Beijing Winter Olympics set a new global benchmark for environmental protection. A non-Western, populous, and world's largest developing country has fulfilled its global commitment to go green.
My friend Du Shaozhong, who was the deputy head of Beijing's Environmental Protection Bureau back then, gave more than 1,000 interviews to overseas media in 2008 and has been trying to convince overseas audiences to believe in China.
And since last year, Beijing no longer needs to hold air quality briefings. Let's look at the nitpicking foreign media, especially the Western media. This topic has apparently been forgotten because they can't find a launching point on this issue, and green has become the true color of China and its manufacturing development. 
It's not difficult to see the changes in China. A common problem Westerners have is that they do not ask themselves how China has accomplished such changes. Most fundamentally, they do not make a comparison between China's development and the historical practice of Western countries toward development. They simply marvel at China's development and transcendence, and as a result, they also develop a sense of apprehension.
If one were to compare China's development with that of the West, it becomes clear that there are at least two points of difference.
First, the overall improvement of Chinese manufacturing and its active push in the global market have not brought wars and conflicts to the world, as the expansion of Western capital power did in the past. The development of Chinese manufacturing has benefited the world by providing the West with the possibility of low inflation, and by lowering the threshold of globalization for developing countries, especially poor ones.
Second, Chinese companies and Made in China have gone global without transferring pollution overseas like Western countries did. China's early development since its reform and opening-up has endured the transfer of pollution from Western companies, and since 2008, China has achieved its green goal of environmental protection entirely through its own efforts.
China will not follow the same path of the global expansion and capital power of Western countries. Anyone who is willing to look carefully at China's changes since the 2008 Beijing Olympics can see the country's choice to forge its own development path, and especially its goal of ensuring the common prosperity of the Chinese people. China's foreign policy, even if it is often identified by the West as increasingly aggressive, actually sets its own course along this path.
The author is a senior editor with People's Daily, and currently a senior fellow with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China. [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @dinggangchina
新闻看点
版权与免责声明:
①凡本网注明"来源:松茂竹苞网综合"的所有作品,均由本网编辑搜集整理,并加入大量个人点评、观点、配图等内容,版权均属于松茂竹苞网,未经本网许可,禁止转载,违反者本网将追究相关法律责任。
②本网转载并注明自其它来源的作品,目的在于传递更多信息,并不代表本网赞同其观点或证实其内容的真实性,不承担此类作品侵权行为的直接责任及连带责任。其他媒体、网站或个人从本网转载时,必须保留本网注明的作品来源,并自负版权等法律责任。
③如涉及作品内容、版权等问题,请在作品发表之日起一周内与本网联系,我们将在您联系我们之后24小时内予以删除,否则视为放弃相关权利。
热门小说