博客

  • China to curb ‘one-size-fits-all’ law enforcement on factory ventilation

    China to curb ‘one-size-fits-all’ law enforcement on factory ventilation

    BEIJING – In a targeted move to address widespread complaints from manufacturing enterprises over inflexible regulatory practices, three top Chinese government agencies have jointly released new policy guidelines aimed at eliminating rigid, uniform law enforcement surrounding factory ventilation requirements.

    The new framework, issued by the Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, and the Ministry of Emergency Management, was developed in direct response to repeated reports from businesses across the country that local enforcement officials often imposed contradictory, one-size-fits-all rules forcing factories to either keep all production windows permanently open or fully closed, regardless of individual operational circumstances.

    Under the newly published guidelines, uniform blanket requirements are set to be replaced with context-appropriate regulation tailored to different factory setups. For production facilities that release airborne pollutants but cannot fully enclose or seal their work areas, law enforcement officers are no longer permitted to issue simple mandatory orders to keep all windows closed. Instead, regulators are required to allow alternative mitigation strategies, including switching to lower-emission raw materials and implementing targeted local exhaust gas management systems to control pollution.

    For factories that operate in fully enclosed or sealed workspaces, the guidelines also ban rigid mandatory orders requiring windows to be kept open at all times. If hazardous airborne substances in these enclosed environments exceed official safety thresholds, facilities are directed to install professional ventilation solutions such as interlocked fan systems that meet regulatory requirements, rather than relying on arbitrary window-opening rules that do little to improve worker safety or reduce pollution.

    Beyond revising ventilation-specific rules, the policy calls on local regulatory authorities across China to refine their understanding of enforcement standards by accounting for the unique operational characteristics of enterprises in different industrial sectors. It also mandates expanded professional training for frontline law enforcement personnel to reduce the incidence of rigid, noncontextual enforcement that unnecessarily disrupts legitimate production activities.

  • El Nino likely to form in coming months, raise global heat risk: China climate center

    El Nino likely to form in coming months, raise global heat risk: China climate center

    A new El Niño event, defined by anomalously warm sea surface temperatures across the central and eastern equatorial Pacific, has a high likelihood of developing in the coming months, potentially intensifying to moderate or stronger levels by the end of 2026, according to China’s National Climate Center. This development will amplify the risk of elevated global temperatures and an increase in extreme weather events across the planet.

    Recent ongoing monitoring from the center confirms that sea surface temperatures in the key equatorial Pacific region have continued a steady upward trend, a defining early indicator that El Niño is already in the early stages of formation. Projections from the center indicate the Pacific will transition into official El Niño conditions around May 2026, with a moderate or stronger event expected to take shape between summer and autumn, persisting at minimum through the end of the calendar year.

    The forecast comes amid widespread viral online speculation claiming the world could face the most intense El Niño event in 140 years, paired with predictions of unprecedented record-breaking global heat this year that has drawn broad public concern. However, Chen Lijuan, chief forecaster at the National Climate Center, emphasized that it is far too early to confirm that 2026 will see all-time high global temperatures.

    “Taking into account the well-documented lagging effect of El Niño, it remains premature to conclude that the planet will hit a new extreme heat record this year. That said, the associated risks are clearly increasing,” Chen explained.

    El Niño forms when sea surface temperatures across large swathes of the tropical Pacific rise far above long-term average levels. This ocean warming releases massive quantities of heat stored deep in the ocean into the atmosphere, driving a measurable rise in global average temperatures. When this additional warming overlays the long-term, human-caused trend of global warming, it makes heat waves more frequent, more intense, and longer-lasting, the center noted.

    The full warming impact of an El Niño event typically emerges with a delay, with peak influence most often felt in the calendar year following the event’s formation. “For this reason, we cannot yet confirm whether 2026 will see record-breaking heat,” Chen added.

    Wang Yaqi, a senior engineer at the National Climate Center, pointed out that stronger El Niño events carry far-reaching negative impacts across global economies, energy infrastructure, and public health, as they are closely linked to more frequent extreme heat, severe droughts, and intense heavy rainfall events. For example, extreme flooding triggered by intense El Niño-driven rainfall can force hydropower facilities to reduce generation or shut down entirely, while prolonged drought conditions can also cut electricity output sharply across multiple generation types.

    In the public health sector, shifts in rainfall and temperature patterns tied to El Niño can increase the transmission rate of a range of infectious diseases. Additionally, drought and sustained extreme heat raise the risk of destructive wildfires in vulnerable regions, Wang explained.

    Crucially, the risks associated with El Niño do not stem from the climate pattern alone. Instead, harmful impacts typically emerge from the interaction of multiple overlapping climate factors, with El Niño acting as a triggering event within a broader climate system already altered by long-term global warming.

    Climate science confirms that for every 1 degree Celsius increase in global average atmospheric temperature, the maximum moisture capacity of the air rises by roughly 7 percent. This basic physical effect means higher temperatures accelerate evaporation, worsening drought conditions in dry regions, while also increasing the probability of extreme rainfall and destructive flooding when precipitation does occur.

    Looking ahead, the combination of long-term background global warming and additional warming driven by El Niño will raise the likelihood of compound extreme weather events, including more intense heat waves and abrupt, destructive shifts between prolonged drought and sudden heavy rainfall, Wang concluded.

  • China’s reading rate rises amid digital reading boom: survey

    China’s reading rate rises amid digital reading boom: survey

    As digital reading continues to gain widespread traction across China, new national survey data reveals a steady uptick in overall reading rates among Chinese adult citizens, marking further progress in the country’s push to build a nation of avid readers.

    The 2025 survey, conducted by the Chinese Academy of Press and Publication, was publicly announced at the fifth National Reading Conference hosted in Nanchang, the capital of east China’s Jiangxi province, on Monday. Data shows the comprehensive reading rate for Chinese adults reached 82.3 percent last year, a 0.2 percentage point increase from 2024. This marginal but consistent growth reflects the tangible outcomes of China’s long-running initiatives to promote reading across all segments of society.

    Beyond rising overall reading rates, the survey offers a detailed snapshot of evolving reading habits among the Chinese public. In 2025, the combined per capita reading volume for both print paper books and electronic books hit 8.39 copies per person, while the total number of digital reading works available to Chinese readers surpassed 70 million distinct titles. Around 80.8 percent of adult respondents reported that they regularly engage in digital reading, confirming the format’s dominant position in the modern reading landscape.

    The survey also highlights growing interest in supplementary reading formats: the share of adults who consume audiobooks rose 0.2 percentage points year-on-year to 38.7 percent in 2025, while the proportion of adults who watch video book reviews jumped 0.6 percentage points to 6.3 percent.

    Surging consumer demand for digital reading content has driven rapid expansion of the domestic market. Over the past five years, China’s mass market for digital reading nearly doubled in size, swelling from 30.25 billion yuan (approximately 4.4 billion U.S. dollars) in 2020 to 59.48 billion yuan in 2025.

    Despite the digital boom, print books have retained significant loyal support among Chinese readers. The survey found that 45.9 percent of adults still prefer physical books over all digital formats, with literary works ranking as the most popular reading category overall.

    This dual preference reveals that while Chinese readers embrace the convenience of on-the-go digital access, their demand for immersive deep thinking, structured systematic learning, and meaningful spiritual nourishment through reading has not faded in the digital era.

    Wu Shulin, chairman of the Publishers Association of China, noted that even amid widespread digital adoption, deep focused reading remains the core foundation for individual personal growth, long-term career achievement, and ethical cultivation. He called for enhanced public guidance to improve the quality of digital reading and broader efforts to nurture a culture of deep reading, encouraging readers to move beyond superficial fragmented browsing and engage with more in-depth content.

  • China launches national reading week

    China launches national reading week

    China has officially launched its annual national reading week, kicking off the 2026 initiative during the fifth National Conference on Reading held Monday in Nanchang, the capital city of East China’s Jiangxi province.

    Li Shulei, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and head of the CPC Central Committee’s Publicity Department, was in attendance at the opening event and delivered a keynote address to assembled participants.

    Event attendees united in a call for amplified action to popularize reading among all segments of the Chinese public and cultivate a pervasive, society-wide culture of regular reading. Stressing that reading forms the most foundational pillar of cultural advancement, participants emphasized that nationwide reading programs must be fully leveraged to support China’s broader national strategy to build itself into a leading global culture power.

    In addition to promoting public engagement with reading, attendees called for strengthened investment, development and regulatory oversight of public reading infrastructure, including libraries, community reading spaces and other public resources that make accessible reading materials available to all citizens.

    Running this week from Monday through Sunday, the 2026 National Reading Week will feature a diverse lineup of community and national events designed to reignite public passion for reading, spanning book fairs, author talks, reading clubs and youth engagement programs that reach across urban and rural communities to encourage people of all ages to pick up books and build regular reading habits.

  • The train expert you don’t know you need

    The train expert you don’t know you need

    For many modern travelers, navigating China’s extensive rail network can come with small, unexpected frustrations — from confusing transfer routes to uncertainty about what to expect on different types of train services. But one working rail professional is turning her on-the-job expertise into accessible, helpful content for millions of ordinary people, one short video at a time.

    At 32 years old, Li Xin holds the position of head conductor on the high-speed rail route connecting Jilin City in northeast China and Shanghai, one of the country’s busiest economic hubs. Outside of her full-time responsibilities on the train, Li has built a growing following on the Chinese short-video platform Douyin under the screen name “Tie Xinran”, where she shares insider knowledge about all things rail travel.

    One of Li’s most popular pieces of content, a video exploring China’s classic “green skin” conventional trains — a nostalgic and still widely used service that predates the high-speed rail era — has racked up more than 100,000 likes from viewers across the platform. Li fits video editing and content creation into her schedule during work breaks, treating the project as a fun, rewarding hobby that lets her connect with passengers beyond her daily shifts.

    What started as a side project has already made a tangible difference for many travelers. Li often gets recognized by passengers during her work, who tell her that her practical transfer guide videos helped them plan smoother, less stressful trips. For Li, the project is far more than a personal pastime: she plans to keep growing her channel as an “online conductor”, committed to adding both practical convenience and a little extra joy to people’s travel journeys through her unique, insider perspective.

  • Strong winds, cold air bring sandstorms to northern China

    Strong winds, cold air bring sandstorms to northern China

    China’s National Meteorological Center issued a renewed blue-level sandstorm alert on Monday, warning that a combination of powerful winds and an invading cold air mass would bring widespread dust and sand intrusion to large parts of the country’s northern region. The blue alert marks the lowest level in China’s four-tier national weather warning system, activated when meteorological conditions meet moderate-risk thresholds for hazardous weather.

    According to the center’s official forecast, the combined influence of the moving cold front and sustained strong winds will bring blowing sand and scattered dust events to multiple northern provincial-level regions between Monday and Tuesday. More severe full-scale sandstorms are projected to hit portions of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

    Meteorological officials have outlined multiple risks stemming from this weather event: the poor air quality and reduced visibility will create disruptions for agricultural operations and ground transportation, elevate public health risks for residents with respiratory conditions, and increase the likelihood of wildfires in northern forest and grassland areas.

    In Beijing, the city’s emergency warning management agency announced it had lifted its local blue dust alert early Monday morning, after significant improvements in atmospheric visibility cleared the capital’s air of excessive particulate matter.

    The active cold air mass driving the sand event is also triggering sharp temperature drops across a wide swathe of China. On Monday alone, regions in Northeast China and areas along the Yellow and Yangtze river basins will see temperatures fall between 6 and 10 degrees Celsius, with some local areas recording temperature plunges of more than 10 degrees Celsius.

    From Monday through Thursday, the collision of cold and warm air masses will bring widespread rain and snow precipitation to central and eastern China. Portions of Inner Mongolia and Heilongjiang Province are forecast to see light to moderate snow or sleet, with isolated areas expected to experience heavy snowfall or full blizzard conditions.

  • PLA Air Force sends Y-20B aircraft to repatriate remains of CPV martyrs from ROK

    PLA Air Force sends Y-20B aircraft to repatriate remains of CPV martyrs from ROK

    In a solemn ceremony of national remembrance, the People’s Liberation Army Air Force has deployed a Y-20B large transport aircraft to undertake the mission of bringing home the 13th batch of remains of Chinese People’s Volunteers (CPV) martyrs from the Republic of Korea (ROK). This updated announcement was first published by China Daily on its official website, with the latest revision timestamped 14:30, April 20, 2026.

    The repatriation of CPV martyrs’ remains is an ongoing coordinated effort between China and the ROK that honors the sacrifice of service members who fought in the Korean War. For over a decade, successive batches of martyrs’ remains have been returned to their home country, allowing these fallen heroes who gave their lives defending national security and regional peace decades ago to finally be laid to rest on Chinese soil.

    The use of the domestically developed Y-20B, China’s indigenously built large military transport aircraft, for this mission carries profound symbolic meaning. It reflects the nation’s deep respect for its fallen heroes and underscores China’s commitment to honoring the legacy of those who sacrificed for the country. This mission also continues the long-standing tradition of respect for military sacrifice that unites the Chinese public in collective remembrance.

  • Gulf poised to move closer to China after the war

    Gulf poised to move closer to China after the war

    Nearly two months of open conflict stemming from the Iran war have sent deep, systemic shocks across the Gulf region, upending two core assumptions that have anchored regional stability for close to a century. For decades, the Gulf’s economic model flourished under a framework built on perceived geopolitical stability, reinforced by competitive policy incentives including zero-tax regimes, flexible regulatory frameworks, and a rapidly growing, diversified startup ecosystem. Parallel to this economic structure, the region’s security order rested on the decades-old oil-for-security pact with the United States, backed by a dense network of U.S. military installations and advanced defense hardware across the region.

    Today, both foundational pillars have suffered tangible erosion after weeks of cross-region missile and drone strikes that have hit all Gulf states. This new reality has forced Gulf capitals into a painful period of strategic re-evaluation, particularly over Washington’s reliability as a long-term security guarantor. As a result, the region is turning its gaze eastward with a new urgency that did not exist before the outbreak of war.

    In this post-conflict landscape, economic diversification is no longer just an ambitious long-term goal—it is a growing necessity for long-term survival. Among potential partners, China stands out as the most logical option for deepening cooperation, given its already massive and expanding economic footprint across the Gulf built on decades of growing trade, cross-border investment, and large-scale infrastructure partnerships.

    While the Sino-Gulf relationship is not without its inherent constraints, the sheer scale of Chinese economic engagement in the region has created a gravitational pull that can no longer be ignored. The bilateral partnership evolved into a formal comprehensive strategic alignment after Chinese President Xi Jinping’s landmark 2022 visit to Riyadh for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Summit. By 2025, annual multilateral trade between China and the GCC hit approximately $300 billion, cementing China’s position as the GCC’s largest single trading partner. Where Chinese investment was historically concentrated almost exclusively in the energy sector and large-scale port developments, the post-war shift is pushing both sides to explore far deeper economic integration across new sectors.

    The future of this expanding partnership is set to be shaped by three key sectors where China’s industrial leadership and Gulf capital create natural synergies. The first is green energy transition, a field where China already holds undisputed global dominance, controlling more than 80% of the world’s total solar panel manufacturing capacity. Chinese exports of wind turbine generators grew by roughly 50% in 2025, and the country accounts for 70% of global electric vehicle (EV) production—an alignment that perfectly matches Gulf nations’ long-term goals to diversify their economies away from overreliance on hydrocarbon exports. For Gulf states, partnering with Chinese firms is a pathway to access the cutting-edge technology needed to transform their domestic power grids and transportation sectors, with major Chinese brands including BYD, Geely, and Changan already positioned to lead this transition.

    The second area of growing cooperation is being enabled by the expansion of the BRICS+ framework, which provides a formal platform for cross-regional financial integration that can act as a hedge against overreliance on the Western-dominated global financial system. While a full shift to a yuan-denominated oil trade system remains distant due to the entrenched dominance of the petrodollar, both sides have already begun testing new alternative mechanisms. For example, the mBridge project, a joint initiative between the central banks of China and the United Arab Emirates, is currently piloting a central bank digital currency (CBDC) platform that allows cross-border trade settlements to bypass Western intermediary banks entirely. These trials allow Gulf states to diversify their financial risk exposure while preserving their long-standing traditional economic and political ties with Western powers.

    The third key area of collaboration centers on China’s flagship Belt and Road connectivity project, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). With a total cumulative investment of roughly $62 billion, CPEC offers a strategic solution to China’s long-standing “Malacca Dilemma” — the geopolitical vulnerability that sees roughly 80% of China’s total oil imports pass through the narrow Strait of Malacca, a chokepoint vulnerable to external disruption. By expanding investment in CPEC and the deep-water Gwadar Port, Gulf nations can integrate their existing maritime trade routes with overland corridors leading directly into Central Asia. This positioning allows Gulf states to reemerge as central nodes in a new multipolar global trade map, a particularly valuable strategic shift given that 42% of China’s total 2025 crude oil imports came from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia accounting for 14% and the UAE contributing 7% of that total.

    That said, it is critical to acknowledge clear boundaries to the growing Sino-Gulf closeness, most notably the vast structural gap in military commitments between China and the U.S. in the region. While the post-war security shock has acted as a major wake-up call for Gulf leadership, it should not be misinterpreted as a desire to fully replace the United States with China as the region’s primary security partner.

    Gulf leadership has long been deeply pragmatic, with no interest in exchanging one form of single-partner dependency for another. The security domain remains the single most significant barrier to a full strategic shift away from the U.S. Currently, the U.S. maintains a formidable military presence of between 40,000 and 50,000 personnel across roughly 10 regional countries, with Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base alone hosting more than 10,000 U.S. troops. In stark contrast, China’s only military footprint in the broader region is a single logistical support base in Djibouti, consistent with Beijing’s long-standing foreign policy principle of non-interference in other nations’ internal affairs. Even in defense procurement, the gap between the two powers remains substantial and cannot be closed quickly. While China has grown into a more prominent global arms exporter, it still lags far behind the U.S. in regional market share.

    Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) underscores this gap: between 2021 and 2025, the U.S. accounted for 54% of all arms imports to the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia — the largest global recipient of U.S. arms exports — importing 12% of total U.S. defense exports over that period. By comparison, Chinese arms exports to the entire Middle East between 2016 and 2025 totaled just 732 million in Trend-Indicator Value (TIV), SIPRI’s standardized metric for tracking defense trade trends. That is a tiny fraction of the $19.5 billion TIV in U.S. arms exports to the region over the same 10-year period. While Chinese unarmed drones have grown in popularity for their lack of attached political conditions, they cannot yet match the fully integrated air and missile defense systems that the U.S. military provides to regional allies.

    In the end, the post-war regional shift is not a radical, binary pivot from Washington to Beijing. Instead, it is a deliberate push by Gulf middle powers to gain greater strategic autonomy. Gulf states do not see China as a replacement for the U.S., but rather as a necessary strategic hedge. By diversifying both their security and economic partnerships, they are building a multipolar “insurance policy” that carries far less long-term risk than continuing to rely entirely on a single, increasingly fraying security umbrella.

    This logic of seeking alternatives to Western-dominated frameworks is not about replacement; it is about building a more resilient multipolar foundation for the region that delivers lower long-term costs and greater economic benefits for Gulf states’ long-term survival. This shift eastward is a calculated, pragmatic response to a changing global order where the old certainties of the decades-old oil-for-security pact no longer hold.

  • World Industrial Design Association launched in Shanghai

    World Industrial Design Association launched in Shanghai

    In a landmark move for global industrial design collaboration, the World Industrial Design Association (WIDA) officially launched its operations in Shanghai, marking a new chapter for cross-border innovation and industry-academia partnership in the global design sector.

    Approved by China’s State Council, the new global body is co-founded by a diverse coalition of stakeholders, including the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, the China Industrial Design Association, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, alongside a wide range of design organizations, private enterprises, academic institutions, and industry experts from across the globe. The association’s permanent secretariat will be hosted at the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology.

    The inaugural general assembly of WIDA was convened at the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology on Friday, one day ahead of the official launch. During the founding meeting, members confirmed that Zhu Xinyuan, president of the host university, would serve as the first chairman of the global association.

    As of its launch, WIDA has attracted 168 founding members – both institutional and individual – hailing from 23 countries and regions worldwide, with existing collaborative networks extending to more than 60 nations across every inhabited continent. This broad international base underscores the global demand for a unified platform to advance industrial design development.

    Outlining the organization’s core mission, Chairman Zhu emphasized that WIDA’s overarching vision is to leverage industrial design as a connecting link to drive the shared development and prosperity of global industrial civilization. Beyond fostering professional growth, the association is structured to act as a critical bridging force across geographic boundaries, academic disciplines, industry sectors, and cultural backgrounds.

    Its core stated objectives include advancing deeper integration between global industrial design practice and industry-academia-research collaboration, lifting the overall development standards of industrial design worldwide, and cultivating an open, collaborative, and high-efficiency global innovation ecosystem. The association will also prioritize facilitating open dialogue, joint innovation projects, and collective progress among members of the global industrial design community, creating new opportunities for knowledge sharing and co-creation that benefit both developed and emerging economies.

  • Green belt helps curb desertification, invigorate local industries in Xinjiang

    Green belt helps curb desertification, invigorate local industries in Xinjiang

    Along the sun-baked southern fringe of the Taklimakan Desert, China’s largest shifting sand desert, a sweeping, vibrant green barrier stretches far beyond the visible horizon. Hardy sand-fixing trees stand tall as resilient sentinels holding back encroaching dunes, while fruit orchards and medicinal plantations have taken firm root in what was once barren, inhospitable sand. This dramatic transformation is the result of the region’s ambitious Taklimakan Desert sand-blocking green belt initiative, which is delivering dual wins: reversing advancing desertification and unlocking new sustainable economic opportunity for local communities in southern Xinjiang, Northwest China.

    What began as an ecological restoration project has evolved into a model of balanced development that pairs environmental protection with inclusive economic growth. Rather than treating desert management as a purely conservation effort, regional planners designed the green belt to support commercially viable, sand-adapted industries that benefit local households. Today, medicinal herbs such as Cistanche deserticola — a valuable traditional Chinese medicine — are grown among sand-fixing shrubs, while drought-tolerant fruit tree plantations produce high-quality crops for markets across China and beyond.

    Official project data shows that the expansion of these sand-based sustainable industries now covers 10.83 million mu, equivalent to roughly 722,000 hectares, of former desert land. The sector generates an annual output value of 28.975 billion yuan, approximately $4.25 billion, injecting much-needed vitality into the regional economy and creating stable local jobs for rural residents. Photographs from mid-April 2026 captured workers at an agricultural technology firm in Aksu, a key prefecture along the desert’s edge, sorting processed slices of harvested Cistanche deserticola ahead of distribution to pharmaceutical and wellness markets.

    Ecological monitoring data confirms the project’s environmental impact: the green belt has significantly slowed the southward advance of Taklimakan’s dunes, reduced regional sandstorm frequency, and improved overall soil retention across southern Xinjiang. For local stakeholders, the initiative stands as a proof of concept that arid desert landscapes do not have to be economic wastelands — with strategic planning and sustainable management, they can be turned into productive, vibrant lands that support both people and the planet.