(1) Caitlin Dewey, China’s Disposable Chopstick Addiction Is Destroying Its Forests. Mar 14, 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/bl ... roying-its-forests/
("China uses 20 million trees each year to feed the country’s disposable chopstick habit, Bo Guangxin, the head of a major forestry group, told Chinese parliamentarians on Friday according to Chinese state media. At 4,000 chopsticks per tree, that’s roughly 80 billion chopsticks per year — far more than the 57 billion estimated by the country’s national forest bureau")
Note: The report is based on South China Morning Post.
(a) 港媒:木制餐具正令中国的森林承受沉重负担. 新华网, Mar 12, 2013.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/gangao/2013-03/12/c_124445503.htm
* BO Guangxin 吉林森工集团董事长 柏 广新
(b) Chris LUO, China's 80 Billion Disposable Chopsticks a 'Burden' on Forests. SCMP, Mar 11, 2013.
http://www.scmp.com/news/china/a ... icks-burden-forests
(2) Howard Schneider, On Think Tank Row, a China Critic From China. Mar 13, 2013.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/bu ... d70acad2_story.html
two consecutive paragraphs:
Min ZHU’s [朱 民; born 1952] address Tuesday at the Johns Hopkins University School for Advanced International Studies [on Mar 12, 2013] wasn’t focused on China. But in answering questions afterward, Zhu, deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund, endorsed some of the chief complaints that US leaders — and the IMF — have made about the world’s second-largest economy.
"Capital and resource prices are too cheap, Zhu said, which has led to an unhealthy glut of investment and a 'risky' situation in which only 60 percent of the country’s industrial capacity is being used. |