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‘Green’ drive goes beyond Olympics
By Li Xing
I had no time to venture into downtown Beijing from where I live and
work near the northern Fourth Ring Road in early November, when Chinese
and African leaders met at the forum to discuss further co-operation.
During the forum a few hundred thousand private and government cars
refrained from going into the city streets. Those who drove in the
downtown area couldn’t help but marvel at the light traffic they
enjoyed.
Traffic became the talk of the town, and most people are convinced that
the effective traffic management, which won public support, was a
successful rehearsal for the coming 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.
It is also a prelude to fulfil the promise we made to the world: The
Games will be a “green,” or environmentally friendly, sports gala.
But I believe we should also think and plan far beyond the Olympics. The
traffic congestion and exhaust emissions as well as smoggy weather are
not improving our lives and work.
We rejoice our success in getting several hundred million people out of
poverty and now most people have to work even harder so that they can
live a comfortable life.
We have also increased our dependence on fossil fuels. We have not
worked hard enough at a recyclable economy and environmental protection.
A lot of people, from home and overseas, have been sounding alarms to a
possible bleak future when the earth’s fossil fuels run out and the
alternatives do not work to satisfy our insatiable demand.
In fact, over the past week, I have personally heard a few prominent
Americans such as David Brady from the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University and Thomas Friedman, New York Times columnist discussing the
challenges we Chinese must face with our increased affluence,
urbanization and gross domestic product (GDP).
We may not feel comfortable being admonished by other people, especially
Americans, whose country consumes, imports and stores more fossil fuels
than any other country in the world.
What Brady and Friedman may not be aware of is that many ordinary
Chinese are taking ingenious action to save water, electricity and
fossil fuels. Quite a few villages in the suburbs of Beijing have made
use of solar or wind energy and bio-fuels to cook, heat water and heat
their homes.
And the government is starting to implement a “green” GDP drive to
evaluate official performances by how much they can reduce consumption
of energy and raw materials and pollution in pushing higher
developmental figures.
To ease the traffic and encourage more people to take public transport,
several subway lines are under construction, snaking underneath the
urban centre of Beijing.
The Fifth Line goes right by where I live. When this line opens, I don’t
think my family will ever drive to the Wangfujing shopping area
downtown, where we go now and then.
Many projects or programmes are either in the works or being planned,
but this does not mean we are doing enough.
We have to face the facts that our rivers are still polluted and the sky
is often grey. We still breathe in dirty air and drink and eat things
that we fear are contaminated.
We can no longer tolerate our slackness in energy-saving and pollution
control, because waste of raw materials and energy will not sustain the
improved life we seem to be enjoying today and may well jeopardize the
lives of not only ours but also our children’s and grand-children’s.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |