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"Bamboo holds deep symbolic value in Chinese culture. It grows endlessly, stands upright on its own, and flourishes in ...
The global Bamboo Market is projected to grow from USD 7,245.6 million in 2024 to USD 20,388.7 million by 2034, with a ...
Bamboo Market. The global bamboo market was valued at approximately USD 6,533.5 million in 2023 and is projected to reach USD ...
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has toured a panda breeding facility in the final stages of an extended state ...
Looking for things to do in Guangzhou? This underrated Chinese city has it all, from dim sum brunches to riverside strolls ...
Someone made very sophisticated wooden tools in China 300,000 years ago, and it might have been Denisovans or even Homo ...
BEIJING—China on Friday pledged to approve export applications for rare earths to the U.S., potentially easing a major irritant in the countries’ trade negotiations that has also become a ...
In China, as elsewhere, an abundance of degrees has made each one less valuable. And as the economy has slowed in recent years, the youth unemployment rate has risen, even among graduates.
Nevertheless, the US should not treat China’s flexibility as weakness. Like bamboo, when pushed too far in one direction, the force with which it springs back can be quite damaging.
Within the next decade, China hopes to become a global leader in protected nature reserves, creating a network of wilderness that would be three times the size of the U.S. system.
Populists and abundance proponents have retreated into factional warfare. But both sides need to realize that they need each other.