China Pictorial (English)

No, Thanks

China Bans the Import of Certain Classes of Waste

- Text by Zhou Xin

Astroll through Tianfu Ecological Park on a weekend is a relaxing activity for families in Kunshan, a city in eastern China’s Jiangsu Province. But while walking through the seemingly virgin forest, one may hear the roar of a passing bullet train. This is not a coincidenc­e—the park was built right on a gravel pit left by constructi­on of high-speed rails.

Situated at the Yangtze River Delta, Kunshan serves as the eastern gate to Jiangsu Province from Suzhou to the west and is bordered by Shanghai to the east. The county-level city has managed to realize fast developmen­t while preserving its environmen­t at the same time, which awed internatio­nal students from Beijing Normal University when they visited in April.

“This place is wonderful,” exclaimed Mahgoub Fahmi Ahmed Abdelrahea­m, a student in the MBA program of the Emerging Market Institute of Beijing Normal University. He was a banker in Sudan. “Its GDP ranks high, it has groves of trees everywhere and the air is really clean. I want my whole family to visit this city in the future.” Miraculous Transforma­tion

“In 2017, Kunshan became China’s first county-level city with GDP over 300 billion yuan and financial revenue over 30 billion yuan,” said Zhang Yuelin, deputy secretary of the Kunshan Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) while briefing the students on the city’s developmen­t. “It topped the list of China’s small and medium-sized cities in terms of comprehens­ive strength, investment potential, quality of new urbanizati­on, innovation and entreprene­urship.”

In 1983, Kunshan’s GDP from industry first surpassed that of agricultur­e, a milestone in its transforma­tion from an agricultur­al society to an industrial one, which was the first of the six major transforma­tions the town has achieved since China’s reform and opening-up policy was launched four decades ago.

Since then, Kunshan has witnessed the transforma­tions from an agricultur­al town to an industrial hub, from closed developmen­t to open developmen­t, from a town with scattered factories to a city of orderly industrial parks. All of these trans-

formations contribute­d to Kunshan’s miraculous growth, which has left the city with a GDP larger than many developing countries.

“I think the transforma­tions that Kunshan has undergone were very significan­t and that we should learn from its technologi­cal innovation,” said Philip Mapak Maker Makoi, another student from Beijing Normal University and once a teaching assistant from the University of Bahr El Ghazal in South Sudan.

Kunshan created a modern economy supported by emerging and hi-tech industries, advanced manufactur­ing, a modern service sector and urban agricultur­e.

“Generally, unless it has extremely good conditions for agricultur­al developmen­t, the first mission for a developing country is to develop industry,” opined Hu Biliang, dean of the Emerging Market Institute. “Kunshan’s GDP is double or triple that of some of the students’ home countries. Its experience in transforma­tions can be used by developing countries for their own growth.”

Smart and Green Developmen­t

Tianfu Ecological Park, built in 2013 over a gravel pit, has developed into a national wetland park, which evidences the city’s persistent efforts in protecting the environmen­t during its fast economic growth.

As one of the country’s few wetland land parks with a permanent rice field, the he park also places special attention on balancing the rice field and the wetland. d.

In the “Intelligen­t Kunshan” special class, students become ac- quainted with the city’s smart system tem that monitors traffic, river conditions, network connection, security, ty, government administra­tion and more throughout the city in a real-time manner. Screens will display the informatio­n of a car that has just been in an accident, facilitati­ng the he handling of traffic accidents.

“Kunshan’s endeavors to develelop a smart city are a great example le

of using big data to enhance public services,” said Beksultan Mametibrai­mov from Kyrgyzstan. “Data can sometimes open a door to the future and enable forecastin­g so you can move forward more confidentl­y. Awareness about patterns of the traffic congestion and criminal activities will help the government develop more effective policies. One of the reasons I chose this MBA program was data analysis, which is part of my job. It is quite impressive how they have used the data.”

A Special MBA Program

In contrast to traditiona­l MBA programs, this program offers indepth teaching about China’s experience in economic and social developmen­t in addition to high-quality lectures delivered by celebrated economists and politician­s.

“I’m going to tell everyone back home to use Wechat,” said Mahgoub. “They would consider it crazy to pay for something by scanning with your phone.”

Certainly, this MBA program is like no other. “We teach things that cannot be learned at Harvard,” declared Hu. “Of course universiti­es in other countries are going to introduce curriculum about China, but the Chinese people know China the best. Foreign students learned how some rural areas in China eliminated poverty during a visit to Shaanxi Province. In Kunshan, they have got an idea of how China got rich.”

Hu was inspired by a master’s program in which he enrolled in 1989 in Germany alongside 45 other students from 43 developing countries in Asia and Africa. That program laid a solid foundation for his subsequent study and career.

This is part of the reason Hu is so enthusiast­ic about this program. “I’m excited to take the baton,” he said. “These students will definitely reap big-time benefits.”

 ??  ?? December 12, 2017: A bullet train runs through Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. IC
December 12, 2017: A bullet train runs through Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. IC
 ??  ?? Jinxi Town, part of Kunshan, is famous for its environmen­t. IC
Jinxi Town, part of Kunshan, is famous for its environmen­t. IC
 ??  ?? Students from the Emerging Market Institute of Beijing Normal University pose for a group photo in Zhouzhuang, an ancient town in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. by Zhou Xin
Students from the Emerging Market Institute of Beijing Normal University pose for a group photo in Zhouzhuang, an ancient town in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. by Zhou Xin
 ??  ?? Students from the Emerging Market Institute of Beijing Normal University visit a distributi­on center of ZARA in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. by Zhou Xin
Students from the Emerging Market Institute of Beijing Normal University visit a distributi­on center of ZARA in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province. by Zhou Xin

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