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China 2.0: MEGA Cities, SMART Cities

Im sorry ... IF Xi can not doing his job very well to solve internal troubles left in the Party from last ten years ... there's not China 2.0, there's only USSR 2.0 ... im sorry, i already see "Boris Yeltsin" appeared in the Party. Today CCP meeting a big trouble from inside since 1949 ... internal division & losing trust from grass-roots level, well like the end of 1980s of CCCP.

2016 is the critical year for CCP and China, not for China city. And we clearly know what's the 2.0 for China if CCP lost herself in China.


Very true brother, currently the extent of power struggle inside CCP is beyond imagination of outsiders. The anti-Xi faction is attacking Xi's economic reform by using all means including foreign media. Check this thread ( As China’s Economic Picture Turns Uglier, Beijing Applies Airbrush ), apparently a "foreigner" - Anne Stevenson-Yang - is attacking China. But did anyone check who is her husband? Hint, an ex-PLA intelligence officer active before Xi came to power.

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Well let's not derail this "urban planning" thread bro, let's start a new thread and discuss in greater details. Obviously there is no bipartisan politics in Beijing, how about "intra-partisan politics"? Tag me brother!
 
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All of a sudden, home prices in major cities like Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing are skyrocketing.

Absolutely skyrocketing.

People are queuing up to buy buy and buy.

Like there is no tomorrow.

Mind-boggling

Why? Why??Why???
 
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All of a sudden, home prices in major cities like Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing are skyrocketing.

Absolutely skyrocketing.

People are queuing up to buy buy and buy.

Like there is no tomorrow.

Mind-boggling

Why? Why??Why???


Seesaw effect between property market and others.
Push by latest fiscal policy trend as well as monetary trend, so that it is bro!
 
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All of a sudden, home prices in major cities like Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing are skyrocketing.

Absolutely skyrocketing.

People are queuing up to buy buy and buy.

Like there is no tomorrow.

Mind-boggling

Why? Why??Why???
Because in the party, there are a strong pro-USA capitalism wing such as Wen Jiabao, Li Keqiang and Ren Zhiqiang wing. They have strong control of economic and media organizations. Since 2008, many Chinese economic policies and media propaganda closely follow USA interest instead China interest.

Xi is clearly purging them or weakening them and they are eager to shift their wealth out of China. They need a tool to turn their assets into cash. Last year it was the stock bubble and this year it is the housing bubble. In the stock market, they avoid shorting mechanism while in the housing market, they avoid property tax. These cause both markets lack of enough liquidity and are easy to get manipulated.
This is usually how USA gets out of tough situation during worldwide economic bubbles. Corrupt officials shift other countries' wealth to USA. USA is clearly taking advantage of its fertile land. USA gives them living land and protection while they bring USA wealth. The trade balance clearly doesn't support Yuan devaluation. However, there are still strong calls for Yuan devaluation both in USA and China. These are the calls for those officials that it is time for them to shift wealth out of China. China tries to get international extradition of those corrupt officials abroad but USA is the loophole.

It is very tough situation. Even for many corrupt officials abroad, they still want some bets on China because they know that the west doesn't treat Chinese as equal as whites. The government cannot push them completely out of Chinese interests. The wealth they hold abroad could be Chinese interests abroad.

Xi is clearly looking for someone similar to Zhu Rongji to take the economic power from those Pro-West wings. Both Han Zheng and Huang Qifan are rumored to take this position.

It will take at least one or two years for China to settle down this restructuring. That's why the West and the USA are taking a charge on China in the economic fronts aggressively because they know that China is very busy in this restructuring. After this restructuring, with the low impact of trade on Chinese economy, you will see very touch foreign policy from China, possibly including military unification of Taiwan.
 
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http://e360.yale.edu/feature/as_china_looks_to_cut_emissions_focus_shifts_to_low_carbon_cities/3034/

15 Sep 2016: Report

For China's Polluted Megacities, A Focus on Slashing Emissions

The booming industrial center of Shenzhen is a showcase for Chinese efforts to cut CO2 emissions and make the nation's burgeoning cities more livable. But it remains to be seen whether China's runaway industrial development can give way to a low-carbon future.

by mike ives

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An energy-efficient building in the Shenzhen International Low Carbon City.

The northeastern fringes of Shenzhen — a fishing village that has been rapidly transformed into a global port city of at least 11 million people — are a patchwork of drab factories spewing smoke, and multi-lane highways packed with container trucks. The area epitomizes the severe pollution and runaway urbanization that have dogged southern Guangdong province since China’s ruling Communist Party began to embrace capitalism in the 1980s.

Yet one side road here leads to a jarringly different scene: A riverside plot landscaped with bamboo trees and elevated boardwalks and dotted with energy-efficient buildings that a state-run developer either built from scratch or refashioned from the shells of old factories. “It’s a demonstration of how we can live in a place without pollution and with clear air,” Cheng Fang, a spokeswoman for the developer, said on a recent afternoon at the eco-complex.

Over the last decade, China has taken ambitious steps to begin curbing its carbon footprint. In 2009 the powerful State Council announced a plan to reduce the carbon intensity of the national gross domestic product by 40 to 45 percent by 2020 compared with 2005 levels. And in 2014, President Xi Jinping pledged to peak China’s emissions around 2030 and increase the share of renewable energy sources in the economy from 8.3 percent in 2010 to roughly 20 percent by 2030. Both moves helped lay the groundwork for last year’s landmark climate agreement in Paris, which China and the United States formally ratified this month at the G20 gathering of heads of state in the Chinese city of Hangzhou.

A low-carbon pilot program now underway in 13 Chinese provinces and cities, including Shenzhen, is yet another sign of China’s carbon-cutting ambitions.

Under the program, which the National Development and Reform Commission launched in 2010, the municipalities have drafted policies that prioritize increasing the share of biogas and solar energy in the local energy supply, tightening fuel-economy and green-building standards, preserving urban green space, and prioritizing bicycles over cars in downtown areas, among other goals. Although specific outcomes are clouded by government propaganda and hard to measure objectively, the policies offer early glimpses of how China’s largest cities are beginning to rein in their emissions and create a more livable environment for their inhabitants.​

Among the 13 low-carbon pilot projects, Shenzhen is a leader for several reasons, according to sustainability experts who follow China’s urban development. Its carbon-trading scheme, which began in 2013, was China’s first and a precursor to a national program that is due to begin next year. Shenzhen also aims to have 80 percent of its new buildings green-certified by 2020, making it the most ambitious municipality in that sector among the pilot sites, according to a report by a U.S. Department of Energy laboratory. The city’s $18,812-per-user subsidy for electric vehicles — among China’s highest — has also incentivized the purchase of 8,000 electric vehicles since 2011. And by 2013, its sleek metro system, which opened in 2004, had an annual ridership of more than 777 million — nearly half that of New York City’s subway system.​

These efforts are just a start for Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong and is one of China’s richest cities. After adding at least 3,000 electric buses, 850 electric taxis, and 717 bike-rental stations in recent years, Shenzhen authorities plan to expand the metro system by 131 miles — more than twofold. They also plan to peak the city’s carbon emissions by 2022, eight years earlier than the national goal; significantly increase renewable energy production; and expand their carbon-trading scheme — which has focused on industrial companies and covers 38 percent of the city’s carbon dioxide emissions — to include vehicles. The carbon-trading program, which set an overall cap on carbon intensity and individual pollution targets, began in 2013 and has a transaction volume of $60 million. According to a compliance report by the International Emissions Trading Association, a Geneva-based non-profit that advises the Chinese government on carbon trading, greenhouse gas emissions from those industrial companies decreased by 3.75 million tons in the program’s first year, an 11.5 percent decrease compared with 2010 levels.

Setting up a system of carbon data collection and enforcement was expensive, says Liu Yu, an urban specialist at the state-affiliated China Development Institute. “But our government is rich, so we can afford the cost,” he said during an interview at the institute’s Shenzhen headquarters.

Because Shenzhen’s economy is increasingly dominated by its service and technology sectors, these urban low-carbon policies are not easily replicable in poorer Chinese cities that still depend on heavy industry, experts say. However, they say that it could be a model for wealthier cities that have already entered late-stage urbanization — such as Xiamen, Qingdao, and Suzhou. The Paulson Institute, a Chicago-based think tank that works on sustainable development in China, has called Shenzhen’s eco-complex a model for industrial “transformation” that balances industry with ecology and livability.

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An aerial view of part of the Shenzhen International Low Carbon City.

“Most cities in China no longer want to operate in [the] heavy industry space,” says Steven Ng, director for urban planning in Asia for Atkins, an international design and engineering firm. Shenzhen has already established itself as a national leader on urban planning by designating green space, developing a continuous public waterfront, and aggressively expanding its public transportation system, among other initiatives, Ng says. “A wave of urban regeneration will probably happen in Shenzhen or southern China first,” he notes.

The health of China’s cities is increasingly a global concern. More than 400 million villagers have moved to China’s cities in recent decades, and 15 Chinese cities now have populations of more than 10 million. McKinsey, an American consulting firm, says that by 2030 there may be 15 “supercities” with populations of at least 25 million.

This rapid urbanization has had severe environmental consequences. Air pollution in China has been linked to more than 400,000 deaths per year, according to a study in the British medical journal The Lancet. Urban sprawl also has destroyed many of China’s critical ecological habitats, particularly in the Pearl River Delta, the area of southern China that includes Shenzhen and the manufacturing hub of Guangzhou. A 2014 study in the journal Global Change Biology reported that the delta lost 42 percent of its wetlands between 1992 and 2012, a trend that raises “serious concerns about species viability and biodiversity.”

China’s central government has an expanding list of low-carbon and “eco city” initiatives, but the details are often murky. Ng of Atkins says it is difficult to measure progress because many cities — particularly the first-tier ones of Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou — are constantly developing new initiatives.

But Joanna Mclean Masic, a senior urban specialist in Beijing with the World Bank, says low-carbon initiatives spur competition among Chinese cities and provinces for government grants and foreign investment contracts, and often nudge officials toward sustainable planning decisions. The central government is also rethinking its approach to urban sprawl, she says, and many municipal governments — after years of pursuing breakneck industrial growth — are looking to redevelop underused industrial areas in more sustainable ways.

Ultimately, the decision to embrace low-carbon projects in China is “very much an economic consideration,” and the central government increasingly views a long-term reliance on fossil fuels as a financial liability, says Jan Van der Ven, Asia director at the Carbon Trust, a London-based consultancy that promotes low-carbon technologies in China. Because Shenzhen has long been a domestic economic model for China as a whole, he adds, the central government may take a particular interest in its carbon-trading and other low-carbon projects.

Shenzhen’s low-carbon policies have already produced notable energy savings. In 2010, for example, local officials went beyond other Chinese cities by announcing that all of Shenzhen’s future public buildings would be green-certified on a Chinese standard, which is comparable to U.S. or European ones. The city’s building policies have already contributed to impressive gains. In a 2015 ranking of total green building space in Chinese and American cities by the global real estate firm CBRE, Shenzhen was fourth overall — ahead of New York and Los Angeles, and behind only Beijing, Shanghai, and Chicago.

But Shenzhen’s low-carbon ambitions already face a number of obstacles. For example, the city’s municipal solid waste generation doubled from 2000 to 2011, to about four million tons per year, and composting and incineration are not keeping pace, according to a 2015 study by researchers at Beijing’s Beihang University. And although Shenzhen has several energy-efficient skyscrapers, experts say the industrial buildings on the city’s fringes consume significant energy. That may impede plans to convert them for other uses — as developers intend to do at the model eco-complex, known as The National Comprehensive Experimental Zone for Low-Carbon Development, on Shenzhen’s dusty outskirts.

Another obstacle is bureaucratic. Although Shenzhen’s “special economic zone” status gives it a measure of political autonomy, its policies are subordinate to those of Guangdong province, whose 110 million people account for around eight percent of China’s population. That arrangement can leave Shenzhen vulnerable not only to pollution from neighboring Guangzhou and other manufacturing hubs, experts say, but to provincial regulations that take a more lax approach on environmental standards. Liu Yu of the China Development Institute says Shenzhen’s attempts to bring private vehicles into its carbon-trading scheme have so far been blocked for this reason.

“The Shenzhen government needs more power,” Liu says, pointing to an obvious, if quixotic, solution.
 
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Unfortunately, all countries when undergoing development have to pay the price of pollution. Japan also went through this pollution stage; for example, they have the Minamata mercury pollution problem.

What I fear for some poor countries which already have high pollution, how are they going to develop and industrialize without making their pollution worse. If an industry is clean and green, I don't think the rich countries are willing to relocate them to poorer and cheaper countries. That's the reality.

The key is to tackle the pollution problem after the country has become rich which is what China is doing now. Congratulation to China for doing this.

And in 2014, President Xi Jinping pledged to peak China’s emissions around 2030 and increase the share of renewable energy sources in the economy from 8.3 percent in 2010 to roughly 20 percent by 2030.
I think it was Greenpeace who says when its comes to carbon reduction, China under promises but over delivers. To be cynical, all of a sudden we don't hear too much pollution news about China because western media can't really bash China. Hence, the news is not sexy anymore!

one of China’s richest cities. After adding at least 3,000 electric buses, 850 electric taxis, and 717 bike-rental stations in recent years, Shenzhen authorities plan to expand the metro system by 131 miles — more than twofold.
China is also in the forefront of new energy vehicles.
I have lost count of the number of cities developing their metro subway systems.
China is just too big with so many things happening at the same time. It's not easy to govern the country.

Shenzhen’s low-carbon policies have already produced notable energy savings. In 2010, for example, local officials went beyond other Chinese cities by announcing that all of Shenzhen’s future public buildings would be green-certified on a Chinese standard, which is comparable to U.S. or European ones. The city’s building policies have already contributed to impressive gains. In a 2015 ranking of total green building space in Chinese and American cities by the global real estate firm CBRE, Shenzhen was fourth overall — ahead of New York and Los Angeles, and behind only Beijing, Shanghai, and Chicago.
Wow! Shenzhen is ranked fourth, that's amazing. Other cities can follow Shenzhen's example.
 
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Fri Sep 16, 2016 | 11:37am EDT

China to build at least 60 nuclear plants in coming decade- industry official

China plans to build more than 60 nuclear plants in the coming decade, a top Chinese industry official said on Friday.

Zheng Mingguang, vice president and chief nuclear designer at China's State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC), told Reuters at the World Nuclear Association conference in London that China would build about 30 reactors in the next five years and more in the five years after that.

He said that each of China's major nuclear companies - SNPTC, CNNC and CGN - would start building a minimum of two new reactors per year. (Reporting by Geert De Clercq. Editing by Jane Merriman)

http://www.reuters.com/article/china-nuclear-idUSL8N1BS3MC
 
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Unfortunately, all countries when undergoing development have to pay the price of pollution. Japan also went through this pollution stage; for example, they have the Minamata mercury pollution problem.

What I fear for some poor countries which already have high pollution, how are they going to develop and industrialize without making their pollution worse. If an industry is clean and green, I don't think the rich countries are willing to relocate them to poorer and cheaper countries. That's the reality.

The key is to tackle the pollution problem after the country has become rich which is what China is doing now. Congratulation to China for doing this.


I think it was Greenpeace who says when its comes to carbon reduction, China under promises but over delivers. To be cynical, all of a sudden we don't hear too much pollution news about China because western media can't really bash China. Hence, the news is not sexy anymore!


China is also in the forefront of new energy vehicles.
I have lost count of the number of cities developing their metro subway systems.
China is just too big with so many things happening at the same time. It's not easy to govern the country.


Wow! Shenzhen is ranked fourth, that's amazing. Other cities can follow Shenzhen's example.

part of the reason is because China want these other "bashing" countries to commit to the same reduction China is doing. But they all balk, stall or downright say we can't.
 
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part of the reason is because China want these other "bashing" countries to commit to the same reduction China is doing. But they all balk, stall or downright say we can't.
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I have one thing to say.

No pain, no gain.

And remember, in the end it's always Money talks, bullsh*t walks.
 
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What I fear for some poor countries which already have high pollution, how are they going to develop and industrialize without making their pollution worse. If an industry is clean and green, I don't think the rich countries are willing to relocate them to poorer and cheaper countries. That's the reality.

The key is to tackle the pollution problem after the country has become rich which is what China is doing now. Congratulation to China for doing this.

That's the core of the matter. As I see it, the over-reporting on pollution issue in China by the Western press was somehow designed to stall the country's pace of development. The reality is that, for a country the size of China, there is no development and prosperity without heavy industrialization and infrastructure build-up.

The US, Japan, UK; all went through a similar path. In fact, like you pointed out, the development paths of Japan and China has been pretty much similar in terms of carbon footprint and all that.

Now consider some other countries who are already over-polluted without meaningful industrialization but lack the same attention that the Western press once bestowed upon China. I wonder how they will get all the money without selling tangible stuff to the rest of the world.

China did amazingly by ignoring Western lecturing. If Chinese cities topped the dirties 50 on the list without meaningful industry and infra, of course, they would not create any moral heaviness in the Western press toward the health and wealth of the Chinese citizens.
 
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That's the core of the matter. As I see it, the over-reporting on pollution issue in China by the Western press was somehow designed to stall the country's pace of development. The reality is that, for a country the size of China, there is no development and prosperity without heavy industrialization and infrastructure build-up.

The US, Japan, UK; all went through a similar path. In fact, like you pointed out, the development paths of Japan and China has been pretty much similar in terms of carbon footprint and all that.

Now consider some other countries who are already over-polluted without meaningful industrialization but lack the same attention that the Western press once bestowed upon China. I wonder how they will get all the money without selling tangible stuff to the rest of the world.

China did amazingly by ignoring Western lecturing. If Chinese cities topped the dirties 50 on the list without meaningful industry and infra, of course, they would not create any moral heaviness in the Western press toward the health and wealth of the Chinese citizens.
yes....Chinese mega cities are not even in the top20 most polluted list....
It's not really the pollution but what's behind pollution they are really concerned about.....

Look at Shenzhen, and all other emerging cities such as Guiyang, Nanning and Kunming
Shenzhen is the cleanest big city with the least pollution in China.
Manufacturing in China now is at a different level.
We will continue to witness PM2.5 in Shenzhen decreasing from 20+ to 10+ in the next decade. And more and more cities in China will achieve that goal.
 
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