As China prepares for the Olympic Games, it would do well to study the extraordinary means being used to clean the air in Beijing before the world's athletes arrive. Environmentalists everywhere will be watching to see how effective China's efforts are. Consider these comments from a recent issue of the Asia Times:
The Beijing Olympics is estimated to be the costliest in the long history of the Games - the city has already spent 10 times the US$4 billion that Athens did on infrastructure for the 2004 Games. Officials speak of a "once in a lifetime opportunity'' for China to showcase its modernized capital and its cultural and economic advances. In Beijing, the ascent of modern China is symbolically reflected in the seemingly overnight rise of brand-new and thoroughly futuristic buildings, such as the "bird's nest" national stadium and the "water cube" indoor swimming center, that aim to place the city in the ranks of the world's avant-garde architectural capitals.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Monday, April 14, 2008
Nearly half of respondents in a recent Pew Foundation survey, said their primary source of news and information is the Internet, an increase from 40% last year. Younger adults were most likely to name the Internet as their top source - 55% of those 18 to 29 get most of their news online. Only seven percent get their news from a newspaper. It’s a digital world. Will we ultimately save paper and fossil fuels because of the Internet?
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