China

2125 readers
10 users here now

Discuss anything related to China.

Community Rules:

0: Taiwan, Xizang (Tibet), Xinjiang, and Hong Kong are all part of China.

1: Don't go off topic.

2: Be Comradely.

3: Don't spread misinformation or bigotry.


讨论中国的地方。

社区规则:

零、台湾、西藏、新疆、和香港都是中国的一部分。

一、不要跑题。

二、友善对待同志。

三、不要传播谣言或偏执思想。

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
 
 

I watched the President's New Year's Address, China has emboldened as the contributor to cooperation and peace.

May China prosper with strength and harmony.

May the Global South unite against Western pressure.

May BRICS invite all of Global South to win over Developed World!

May your dreams come true!

62
63
 
 

What i called a "standard-size 'nuclear plant" in the title is a 1000MW one(, or ~8.7TWh/year), some smaller ones only produce 300MV, the superPhoenix is a 1200MW, and the largest model is the EPR with 1600MW, or 12-13TWh/year, which means only one dam would produce as much as 25 EPR.
If i'm illustrating with solar panels instead, 1km^2^ of solar panels only produce ~1TWh/year(, which could rise to ~2TWh/year in the Sahara desert), so that's the equivalent of 300km^2^. We've only surpassed that installed area recently but it's growing exponentially, thanks once again to China b.t.w., so since 300TWh/year is equivalent to ~150-300GW depending on the sunshine, one dam is expected to produce as much as the world installed solar energy capacity in 2015, or twice the currently installed solar capacity in the u.s.

Relatively to energy generation(, and not energy consumption, which is ~4 times larger), that's the equivalent of the yearly production of the United Kingdom, or twice that of Norway or Argentina.

I hope that we(sterners) will ignore this achievement once it's done since, according to Radio Free Asia, and unlike the Hoover Dam, we wouldn't be able to avoid putting a negative spin on ~'the most' clean energy production.

64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
 
 

HOHHOT, Dec. 17 (Xinhua) -- China on Tuesday executed Li Jianping, a former official in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, after convicting him of corruption, bribery, misappropriation of public funds, and collusion with a criminal syndicate.

The death sentence of Li, former secretary of the Party working committee of the Hohhot economic and technological development zone, was initially issued in September 2022 and upheld on appeal in August 2024.

Tuesday's execution followed the approval of the Supreme People's Court (SPC) and was carried out by an intermediate court in Inner Mongolia.

Li was convicted of amassing illicit wealth on a scale rarely seen among officials of his rank.

Despite holding relatively modest local government positions, he was found guilty of embezzling over 1.437 billion yuan (about 200 million U.S. dollars) of funds from state-owned enterprises, receiving gifts and money totaling more than 577 million yuan, and misappropriating over 1.055 billion yuan in public funds.

In addition, Li was convicted of enabling illegal operations by a criminal syndicate under his watch.

Li appealed the decision after the intermediate court sentenced him to death in 2022, with lifelong deprivation of political rights and confiscation of all assets, but the Higher People's Court of Inner Mongolia rejected his appeal in August.

Upon reviewing the case, the SPC ruled that Li's crimes were extremely severe, citing the exceptionally large amounts embezzled and received in bribes, the grave nature of the offenses, the widespread negative social impact and the immense harm to the state and public interests.

The SPC approved the decision of the Higher People's Court of Inner Mongolia to uphold the death penalty. Li was permitted to meet with his next of kin before the execution.

75
view more: ‹ prev next ›