Archive for November 11th, 2008

Beijing Olympic – City moves closer to achieving environment goals

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

SHANGHAI: Efforts to reduce emissions and clean up the environment in this city are bearing fruit, the director of the local environment bureau said Wednesday.

By the end of last month, Shanghai had already achieved 85 percent of the year’s emissions targets for sulfur dioxide (SO2) levels and 90 percent of emission targets for chemical oxygen demand (COD), Zhang Quan said.

“With all environmental measures gradually taking effect, it is very likely we will achieve this year’s target of reducing 10,000 tons of SO2 and 21,300 tons of COD emissions,” he said.

On completion in 2010 of all planned projects to improve the environment, it is likely Shanghai will have reduced its SO2 emission from 513,000 tons in 2005 to 380,000 tons, and COD emission from 304,000 tons to 259,000 tons, Zhang said.

The city’s investment in environmentally friendly projects will this year exceed 30 billion yuan ($4 billion), about 3 percent of its gross domestic product, he said.

Desulfurization facilities, used to remove sulfur that constitutes most of the SO2 emissions, have also been introduced in major power stations.

Similarly, 10 wastewater plants have been built this year and 11 old ones have been upgraded to reduce COD emissions.

At present, 73 percent of Shanghai’s wastewater is being processed, 2 percentage points higher than last year.

Also, 40 of the city’s 49 main and secondary waterways have been cleaned.

Water quality in the two major water sources, Huangpu River and Suzhou Creek, is stable, Zhang said.

“And as of today, Shanghai has recorded 90.5 percent of the days this year as fine or of good air quality,” he said.

More is being done to clean the air, Zhang said.

In October, the Shanghai Municipal People’s Congress endorsed a new regulation to restrict and monitor exhaust from vehicles.

Zhang said the city’s private car plate auction system, which was launched more than a decade ago, has effectively reduced the number of private cars and helped stabilize air quality.

The system regulates the number of private car plates that are issued every month by allotting them to the highest bidder.

Last month, the average price of a car plate was 54,317 yuan ($7,360).

“Considering the huge demand, the government will reduce the number of public car plates, especially those for the Party and political units, next year and give the quota to private car owners,” Zhang said.

Responding to recent questions, Zhang said the environmental assessment of the planned maglev rail extension, which is expected to connect the city’s two airports and to Hangzhou in Zhejiang Province, found that its magnetic radiation is within a distance of 5 m.

“We will continue efforts to educate the public on the system and dispel worries over its effects,” Zhang said.

He admitted that the new rail system – reportedly able to run at speeds of up to 450 kph and expected to be completed by 2010 – will be noisy at such high speeds.

“The government is still studying the best way to minimize the impact on people living near the new lines.”

 (Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

China Travel – Huang Shi Cheng Art Gallery

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Huang Shi Cheng Art Gallery is located in the south of Nanchizi, Dongcheng District of Beijing City.

Huang Shi Cheng Art Gallery, also named Biao Zhang Ku, is a Chinese royal archive protected most perfectly. It was in charge of keeping the royal annals of the Ming (1368-1644) and the Qing (1644-1840) Dynasties. The copy of Yong Le Encyclopedia (the first Encyclopedia of China) compiled in the reign of the Ming Chengzu in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) once was preserved here too.

Huang Shi Cheng Art Gallery was first built in the thirteenth year (1534) of the Jiaqing reign of the Ming Dynasty. It was once the outer annexe of the old city, and kept its original style in the Ming Dynasty after several times of reconstruction later. The whole house of Huang Shi Cheng Art Gallery, surrounded with red high walls, was composed of the main hall, east and west side halls and the imperial stele pavilion, etc. The main hall is made of wood-like bricks, and is nine-bay wide with a hip roof. Its roof, ridges and chiwen (a kind of ornament of roof ridge) are all covered with yellow colored glaze tiles. The wall is built by laying special grinding bricks. Plagues, cup-shaped arches, doors and windows are all carved out of white marbles, and colored paintings are on cup-shaped arches. Without any girder or pillar, the vaulted roof in the hall was called No Girder Hall. There is a white marble pedestal of 1.2 meters high, which is carved with basso-relievo of Dragon Swimming in Seawater on the floor. The pedestal is decorated with 152 camphor wood arks carved with patterns of cloud dragons, and the arks are 1.31 meters high, 1.34 meters wide, and 0.71 meters thick. That is where the archives are treasured up. Windows face to each other in the south and north, making the air convective and fresh. The characteristic of the structure and interior establishments is fireproofing, moisture-proof, moth-proof and free of rat bites. It is not only a building that combines artistic feature, scientific level and practicability, but also a representative of stone room and golden box architecture style recorded in historical books.
 

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Zhouyuan Site

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

 

Capital of the Zhou People before the Shang Dynasty (17th century-11th century BC) was conquered, as well as the site of the city of Western Zhou Dynasty (11th century-771BC)

 

Location: Qishan and Fufeng counties, Shaanxi Province

 

Period: About 11th century-8th century BC

 

Excavated in 1976

 

Bronze tray belonging to a man named Shi Qiang: ritual object (up, mouth diameter 47.3 cm, height 16.2 cm); Jade man: probably as an ornament (left-bottom, height 6.5 cm); Bronze gu (goblet with open mouth, long and narrow stem and flat base) inscribed with the owner’s name, Fu Yi: ritual vessel or wine vessel (right-bottom, height 25 cm); Inscriptions on bronze: (in the background)

Significance: The site has played an important role in exploring the origin of the pre-Zhou cultures, as well as the social, political, economic and cultural developments of the Western Zhou Dynasty.

 

 Introduction

 

Zhouyuan, the ancient capital of the State of Zhou in the late Shang period, is located at the center of Shaanxi Province, covered by farmlands and some modern villages. The continuing archaeological investigations discovered some palace foundations, residential sites for common people, kilns, copper-smelting workshops, storage pits and some small tombs, while the recent efforts have been focused on locating the foundation of the city walls and the royal tombs. Large quantities of stone wares, pottery, bone wares, jade and bronze wares were discovered.

 

In 1977, about 170,000 oracle bones were unearthed, which are of great archaeological value. The most important finding in Zhouyuan Site is the unearthed group of bronze storage pits. By far, more than 30 such storage pits have been excavated with about 1,000 pieces of bronze utensils.

Source: chinaculture.org