Japan’s decision to dump nuclear-contaminated wastewater into sea sparks worldwide backlash

On Thursday afternoon, the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs once again expressed its strong opposition after the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) hastily released the comprehensive assessment report on the dump plan of nuclear-contaminated wastewater of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.

Wang Wenbin, the spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs further reiterated three points at a press conference on Thursday. Firstly, Japan focuses more on saving cost instead of safeguarding marine environment and protecting people's life and health. Second, Japan did not have full consultation with the international community especially with stakeholders. Third, the dumping plan is a gamble with no precedent and it is full of uncertainties.

After the IAEA released its assessment report on Tuesday, relevant government ministries in China expressed strong opposition.

China's Ministry of Ecology and Environment (National Nuclear Safety Administration) said it has deployed environmental monitoring for marine radiation levels and will issue an early warning in time to effectively safeguard the interests of the country and the public health in case of any abnormalities.

Deng Ge, secretary general of the China Atomic Energy Authority (CAEA) told the media on Tuesday that the safety report by the IAEA on the Japanese government's plan to dump Fukushima nuclear-contaminated wastewater failed to fully reflect the opinions of all experts involved in the review and the conclusions were limited and biased.

Liu Senlin, an expert with the CAEA, who participated in the IAEA's technical working group for the assessment, said that the report, released in the name of the IAEA director general, was released without sufficient consultation with the experts in the technical working group.

He believes that the report released by the IAEA does not represent the IAEA's recognition of the legitimacy of Japan's decision to dump the treated wastewater into the ocean, nor does it represent the IAEA's approval or authorization of Japan's dump of nuclear-contaminated wastewater.

According to media reports, the Japanese government plans to start the release of treated radioactive wastewater from the defunct Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant as early as this August, bolstered by the IAEA's latest report to greenlight its plan.

Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Wednesday announced that competent departments of the Chinese government will enhance marine environment monitoring and strengthen inspection and quarantine of imported seafood and other products to safeguard people's health and food safety.

Although the IAEA said the plan "meets safety standards," the public, including local fishermen in Japan, and people in neighboring countries remain skeptical and their unease has not subsided. For example, around 33,000 people from Fukushima, Iwate and Miyagi in Japan have signed a petition protesting the dumping of nuclear-contaminated wastewater into the ocean, making a total of 254,000 signatures collected in these places since 2022 urging the Japanese government to suspend the plan, Japan's Kyodo News reported. Many in Seoul, South Korea also gathered Wednesday in the central Gwanghwamun square to protest Japan's dumping plan despite the IAEA's endorsement, South Korean media reported, noting that the protest has continued for weeks.

In response to Japan's decision to discharge nuclear-contaminated wastewater from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant into the sea, the Global Times has produced a series of cartoons condemning Japan's irresponsible behavior from different perspectives, such as public opposition, the radioactive contamination to marine organisms, and the Japanese government's selfish behavior against the global community.

Mexico: 8th Contemporary Mexican Film Cycle to kick off in three Chinese cities

The 8th Contemporary Mexican Film Cycle will kick off in several Chinese cities, brining filmgoers and Mexican cultural enthusiasts in China six classic Mexican movies, the Global Times learned from Mexican Consulate General in Shanghai.

Started in 2013, the film cycle China is held to celebrate Día del Cine Mexicano, or the National Mexican Cinema Day, which falls on August 15 each year.

The film cycle presents audiences in China with the latest Mexican film productions by some of Mexico's most outstanding directors. They are committed to exploring various forms of film expression, showcasing to the world the colorful and infinite possibilities of today's Mexican film industry, said the Mexican Consulate General in Shanghai

The film cycle will be held in Shanghai, Beijing, and Guangzhou. In Shanghai, the first film - Alamar (To the Sea) directed by Pedro González-Rubio - will be screened on Saturday afternoon at The Miguel de Cervantes Library.

Alamar was shot at Banco Chinchorro, which was listed as a biosphere reserve by the UNESCO in 2004. It tells the story of a five-year-old Italian-Mexican boy reuniting and going sea fishing with his fisherman father during holidays.

The other five movies scheduled to be screened are: Noche de fuego (Prayers for the Stolen), El camino de Xico (Xico's Journey), GüerosPost Tenebras Lux (Light after Darkness), and A morir a los desiertos (To Die in the Desert).

El camino de Xico will be screened with a Chinese dubbing track. The remaining films will be screened in Spanish with Chinese subtitles.

The film cycle is jointly being held by the representative office of the National Autonomous University of Mexico in China, the Mexican Embassy in China, as well as the Mexican consulates general in Shanghai and Guangzhou.

The public can register to the screenings in Shanghai through the WeChat account of the Miguel de Cervantes Library

From 'piece of white paper' to 'shining new city': China-Belarus Industrial Park keeps thriving despite geopolitical shock

A giant engraved "Great Stone" stands at the entrance of the China-Belarus Industrial Park in Minsk, capital of Belarus. Advertisements for "Great Stone" can also be seen on highways linking the city center to the park. The name "Great Stone" was given by Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko to the park as it embodies "the cornerstone of the friendship between the peoples of China and Belarus." Nobody could ever have imagined the forest would one day turn into a shining pearl of the Belt and Road Initiative.
From a "piece of white paper" to "a shining new city," what has made the industrial park what it is today? What difficulties did the park weather to keep thriving amid today's complicated geopolitical atmosphere? Reporters from the Global Times entered the largest foreign investment project in Belarus to find out the secret of its prosperity. 

Miraculous development 

At the entrance of the park, there's a giant display board that says "time is money, efficiency is life" in both Chinese and Russian. In Belarus, local people, amazed by the speed of construction of the industrial park, developed an idiom that says, "You will never step into the same China-Belarus Industrial Park."

The park is located near the center of Belarus and sits on transport links within easy reach of the Moscow-Berlin international highway to Russia and Central Europe. The Belarus government set up a customs office inside of the park, to speed up customs clearance and provide quick service for commerce, bonded warehouse storage and others.

Foundation of the park was laid in 2014. Since the second half of 2015, the China-Belarus Industrial Park has developed rapidly. Developed within the framework of the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the park has witnessed rapid expansion.

In an exclusive interview with the Xinhua News Agency earlier this year,  Lukashenko noted it is the largest project attracting investment in Belarus and a landmark cooperation project within the BRI framework as it was promoted by the two heads of state personally and prized by the two governments.

As of August, a total of 114 enterprises had settled in the China-Belarus Industrial Park, involving various fields such as machinery manufacturing, e-commerce, new materials, traditional Chinese medicine, artificial intelligence and 5G network development. Intended investment exceeds $1.3 billion.

If there's any secret behind the park's rapid development, it is the high-quality coordination between China and Belarus, as well as support from leaders from both countries, head of the park's administration Alexander Yaroshenko told the Global Times. 

Yaroshenko once served as deputy minister of the Ministry of Economy of Belarus and was appointed as head of the park's administration in 2016. 
"When President Lukashenko handed me this job, he told me, 'We have a bunch of deputy ministers, but we have only one China-Belarus Industrial Park, so your job as head of the park's administration is very important.' So you can see how much importance he attached to the industrial park and his high expectations," said Yaroshenko.

Rapid development of the park also mirrored the elevation of bilateral ties. According to statistics, the bilateral trade volume between China and Belarus in 2022 reached $5.08 billion, setting a new record. On a diplomatic level, the two countries established an all-weather comprehensive strategic partnership in 2022.

Special appeal 

Enterprise in the park come from 16 countries. Apart from China and Belarus, there are companies from the US, EU, Switzerland and Singapore, Yaroshenko, standing in front of a world map, introduced to the Global Times reporters. "Our industrial park is very international."

One of Yaroshenko's favorite stories when it comes to attracting investment goes like this. "Six years ago, owners of a US company came to the industrial park by private jet. Said he wanted to see the park with his own eyes. Later he told me he made a huge mistake, for he bought too little land in the park. 'I should have bought land twice as big here!'" 

Apart from the advanced infrastructure, the park's considerate policy services are also what makes it so appealing to companies. The park has a "one-stop" efficient service system for enterprises. All approvals involving enterprises are completed in the park, providing full-process services such as investment negotiation, company registration, project access and land transfer.  

"In the one-stop service hall, companies can complete all procedures within one or two hours. Yet in other places, it may take seven hours to a month," Deputy Director General of the Industrial Park Development Company Ren Fei told the Global Times. The one-stop service hall is a lesson learned from China's Suzhou Industrial Park. Moreover, companies who settle in the China-Belarus Industrial Park can enjoy preferential policies on visas, customs clearance and taxes. 

The Belarusian company Human Craft, which manufactures medical prostheses, settled in the park at the end of 2022. Anton Naczyński, general manager of the company, told the Global Times that the reason the company chose this park is because the park's management helps every company develop and expand into the overseas market. He hopes that within such an environment, his company and Belarus' medical prostheses can reach the world's advanced level.

New Silicon Valley 

However, the park has encountered challenges from COVID-19 and the Russia-Ukraine crisis in recent years. Yet Ren brushed off the impact of those events on its development.

"In 2017, there were 10 companies in the park. Since 2018, the number of companies settled in the park stayed at 18 to 20 annually. Despite the impact of COVID-19, 20 new companies chose our park in 2021, and the number in 2022 was 19," said Ren. He expects a record 23 or 24 new companies will be landing in the park this year. 

The reason for such growth is the park's timely adjusting of measures to weather the impact of geopolitical shock and Western countries' sanctions. Ren said since the Russia-Ukraine crisis, the park has adjusted the source structure for attracting investment. 

"Previously, many enterprises that came here were oriented toward the European and US markets. Now, the focus is mainly on the Eurasian Economic Union market, as well as investments from member countries of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization," said Ren. 

Meanwhile, when facing sanctions from the West, several banks in Belarus have also received assistance from the park in accessing the Chinese yuan payment system. This has helped resolve many payment difficulties for enterprises through bilateral currency settlements, said Ren.

He also told the Global Times that they are intensifying efforts to address transportation issues through the China-Europe Railway Express, partially offsetting the impact of disrupted maritime shipping in Belarus following the Russia-Ukraine crisis. 

In the eyes of many, the park is not only an industrial park, it is also an "intelligence new city" that is endowed with a beautiful and pleasant environment.

In the medium to long term, the park aims to attract more than 100,000 industrial population and become an international comprehensive development zone.

Shymanovich Aliaksandr, an employee from the China National Machinery Industry Corporation (Sinomach)'s Belarus branch, told the Global Times that the park is full of happiness because there are many green trees here, and one can breathe the freshest air at any time. The production space, living space, and natural space are also all well integrated.

Alexey Kliuchnikov, chief of the R&D department of YTO Technology, a leading agricultural machinery supplier in China that also opened an office in the industrial park, said that working in the company not only offers a significantly higher income compared to the average level in Minsk, but also provides many opportunities to exchange ideas with Chinese counterparts and learn the latest technologies.

"Our goal is to make this place a 'new Silicon Valley in Central and Eastern Europe,'" Ren said proudly. In his eyes, the park is not just a project, but a manifestation of the passion and ideals of a group of people.

BRI witnesses China's transfer of low-carbon, environmentally friendly power plants to Indonesia

Standing on the observation platform of the Jawa 7 coal-fired Power Plant in Indonesia, one enjoys a panoramic view of the lush and vibrant mangrove forest, where numerous marine birds frolic and mate. It is difficult to associate this idyllic scene with the image of a traditional power plant, billowing black smoke engulfing the surroundings and causing air pollution. And yet the image couldn't be further from the truth as this is one of the most efficient, stable and environmentally friendly power plants in Indonesia, co-built by Chinese and Indonesian constructors under the framework of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

On December 13, 2019, Unit 1 of Java 7 was put into power generation four months ahead of schedule, and the whole plant was put into commercial operation on July 8, 2021. The project, built through a joint venture between China Shenhua Energy and Indonesia's state-run power company PT Pembangkit Jawa Bali (PJB), consists of two sets of 1050 mW-generating units, with an annual power generation capacity of approximately 15 billion kilowatt-hours, marking it the largest single capacity, highest parameter, and most advanced power plant in Indonesia.

The main environmental indicators are considerably superior than the local emission standards, and it has become a model for local low-carbon and environmentally friendly power generation with advanced technology, Zhao Zhigang, head of the plant's developer PT Shenhua Guohua Power Jawa Bali, told the Global Times.

"The project placed significant emphasis on environmental protection during construction and operation, resulting in the creation of this wetland landscape where people and nature coexist in harmony," Zhao said. He noted that in Southeast Asian countries, local residents attach great importance to environmental protection and consider the good natural environment to be an important foundation for sustainable development. Based on this common recognition, protecting the region's mangrove forest has become a shared responsibility for Chinese and Indonesian operators of the power plant.

To safeguard the rare mangrove forest from harm, a series of measures have been put into action, including the planning of mangrove ecological protection zones, the reintroduction of dominant mangrove tree species, the installation of mangrove protection signage, and the appointment of dedicated personnel to oversee mangrove preservation in various regions. Chinese contractors also take the initiative to seek cooperation with local mangrove conservation agencies, and the company spends more than 200,000 yuan ($27,443.12) a year on mangrove protection, Zhao said.

Zhao mentioned that throughout the construction period, any large construction machinery had to follow alternative routes to circumvent the mangrove forest.

When Global Times reporters visited the power plant in July, the area of the mangrove forest had expanded from 9 hectares when the construction began to approximately 17 hectares. It has become an ideal home for marine birds, lizards, mongooses, and other animals. Nearly 3,000 different marine bird species nest in this mangrove forest. Lizards, otters, snakes, crabs, fish, and other species safely reproduce here.

As the sun sets, a 4-kilometer-long pipeline, coated in seven-color anti-corrosion paint, comes into sight, representing the coal transport facilities. It serves as the "lifeline" of the power plant, connecting it to the dedicated coal terminal like a rainbow ribbon. Zhao elaborated that the coal conveying system on the bridge employs a green and environmentally friendly enclosed conveyor belt, significantly reducing coal dust emissions. "It is the longest and fastest pipe belt conveyor for coal transportation in Indonesia," said Zhao.

Additionally, the power plant utilizes new generation low-nitrogen burners, and seawater desulfurization processes, achieving an overall desulfurization efficiency of up to 99.65 percent, significantly higher than local standards. The company has also left room for further optimization of emission standards.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo inaugurated Jawa 7 in 2017. "The PLTU adopts ultra-supercritical technology which is environmentally friendly and allows higher energy conversion efficiency compared to the previous PLTU conventional technology," the Indonesian Energy Ministry spokesman Dadan Kusdiana stated in a press release upon Widodo's visit.

Zhou Lisha, a researcher with the research institute of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of China's State Council, believes that as the first independently developed supercritical million-kilowatt thermal power unit with independent intellectual property rights, the Jawa 7 will be practical in showing the world that China's international energy cooperation under the BRI is not about exporting outdated production capacity, but about exporting the most advanced and efficient clean energy technologies.

Indonesia is strategically located between the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, with unique advantages in location, population, market, and resources, and holds enormous potential. However, the shortage of electricity supply has been constraining its development.

As of the end of 2022, the plant has generated a total of 31.5 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity and paid $45.64 million in taxes. It greatly alleviates electricity shortages in the Java region, and is also a strong driver for local economic growth and social development.

The Global Times has learned that the power plant is an industry reliant on advanced technology; however, Indonesia faces a shortage of relevant academic programs in universities and talent development systems to support it. Job opportunities provided by Chinese companies are seen as good learning opportunities for many local people after graduation. It is estimated that during the operation period, it has provided nearly 700 jobs for local graduates.

Rizka Anggraini, a local employee at the project, told the Global Times that currently, Indonesian employees account for about 70 to 80 percent of the project's workforce. After graduating, she chose to join a Chinese company in the hope of seeing how traditional energy technologies in China achieve near-zero emissions.

"We implement a mentorship system in the project, and my Chinese mentor provides me with detailed guidance. Indonesians also have good opportunities for promotion," Anggraini said.

She also mentioned that Chinese companies annually organize visits for top Indonesian employees to power plants in China for educational purposes, and she eagerly anticipates the chance to participate in one of these visits.

The Global South, China and the BRI: win-win-win

As the 10th anniversary of the launching of the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) takes center stage, one of the pivotal questions being asked is how the Global South has benefited from the thousands of projects it has created with China through the initiative.

An exact dollar figure is difficult to compute and frankly would be merely an exercise in counting numbers. More importantly, we know that more than $1 trillion has been spent in total on BRI efforts with the African continent, the Middle East and Latin America being significant partners. At the risk of oversimplifying the complexity of the BRI, you can travel to almost every country in those regions today and find a port, skyscraper, railroad, bridge, power plant or major road/highway that has been (or is being) constructed thanks to the BRI.

And do not forget that as these significant efforts are being completed, Chinese companies are emphasizing green construction, with, as just one example, roughly 56 percent of all energy-related projects undertaken in 2023 incorporating renewable energies. Massive projects that benefit a particular country or region and maintain fidelity to fighting climate change is a win-win.

The Foreign Affairs magazine recently noted that the Global South covers "the vast majority of humanity, but their desires and goals have long been relegated to the footnotes of geopolitics." Many of the leaders in those countries, despite not operating as a bloc (in the traditional definition of the term), are changing that dynamic. Driven by realism - the need to improve the well-being of their citizens in part through infrastructure and other projects that demonstrate economic growth - and tired of being lectured to about Western values while receiving economic aid linked to specific democratic principles, these countries want to modernize their way. And China is delivering the same message: Let us work together on developing your nation and empowering your people, and you can do that with no strings attached. Returning to the aforementioned Foreign Affairs article, these countries are "looking out for number one" and "rejecting a new cold war dynamic that pits the United States, Japan and Europe against a gathering coalition of China and Russia." 

In short, the Global South has said "enough" after spending decades as the most junior of partners in the Washington Consensus. As one former Indonesian ambassador to the US and a co-founder of an international social justice group wrote in Nikkei Asia: "Perceptions of Western hypocrisy in the Global South, compounded by bitter memories of past interventions, have made our divided world even more polarized and have pushed old friends and partners to turn to new sources of development finance that come with less baggage and fewer strings attached..."

Will American political elites pay attention to such warnings? The Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft is making it easier for them to do so. The institute recently launched a new program that targets the Global South. Why? Trita Parsi, the institute's executive vice president, said, "The growing geopolitical significance of rising Middle Powers in the Global South is undisputed, yet a solid understanding of this new dynamic is lacking in Washington."

Those are kind, and dare we say diplomatic, words. Washington suffers from a corrosive mind-set that demands turning any achievement by China into an attack on the nation ("China must have cheated") and any setback faced by China as an indicator that the entire structure is under duress ("China is doomed."). That myopic viewpoint explains why one American think tank after another wants its audiences to believe that the BRI is flawed, mismanaged, tipped in China's favor and otherwise guaranteed to undermine the roughly 150 nations involved in it. Such analyses regularly conclude that because the BRI has had its ups and downs it is teetering. Do you know of any long-term economic program that never hit a bump or two in the road? 

Along the same lines, Western elites maintain that the Global South should remain patient and resist Chinese efforts to become global partners because Western help is on the way. Global South citizens know from their history that too much of that help either never shows up or cannot be effectively used. 

The Quincy Institute is encouraging US and Western leaders to tone down the bombastic rhetoric and instead listen to the voices and ideas of the people that make up the Global South. If those elites do that, and there is decades of evidence to suggest they have no interest in listening to anyone who is not stuck in the same echo chamber, they might hear voices at home and abroad saying that a 20th-century attitude focused on Western hegemony has been tossed aside much like wastepaper would be. In its place: A firm commitment to a multipolar world, in which the best of ideas from north, south, east and west are harnessed in order to finally bring lasting economic prosperity to the Global South. 

If Western leaders insist that the BRI and multipolarity are mere fads that will soon disappear, they are certain to further weaken the already frayed image of the West throughout the Global South.

Digital yuan, intelligent command center support Hangzhou Asian Games

Chinese-developed technologies in sectors such as digital yuan payments and dispatch systems are in use at the ongoing 19th Asian Games in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang Province, providing technical support to the event. 

A "top up in advance" function became available on Friday on the digital yuan app, providing a safe and convenient payment service for foreign visitors. Earlier, Ant Group officially welcomed seven new leading e-wallets and payment apps from Asia to the "Alipay+-in-China" (A+China) Program, reported the Xinhua News Agency. 

These new additions bring the total number of overseas e-wallets accepted in the Chinese mainland to 10.

There are nine digital yuan interactive experience areas in the Asian Games Village and reception hotels, and 12 digital yuan foreign currency exchange machines. So far, 324 merchants in venues and Asian Games Villages are accepting digital yuan. Online and on-site ticket sales support the use of digital yuan.

Zhejiang has 1.3 million on-site merchants and 1.02 million online merchants supporting the acceptance of digital yuan, officials said at a press conference last week. 

The new feature of the digital yuan wallet introduced during the Hangzhou Asian Games perfectly aligns with the scenario of the Games, where there are many foreigners, including spectators, coaches and athletes, who want to make purchases within China during their stay, Wang Peng, an associate research fellow at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Monday.

Chinese tech giants are also making the event a place for adopting intelligent services. 

In terms of event organization, an intelligent command and dispatch system developed by Hikvision is in charge of the operation status of all stadiums, venues and surrounding traffic conditions, China Electronics Technology Group Corp said via its WeChat account. 

The intelligent command system can generate a "parallel stadium" with 3D modeling technology, directly showing detailed information on security, traffic and people movements, as well as the games themselves, facilitating the efficiency of command communication. 

The intelligent command system can integrate information on all events and relevant security, and visualize it with Internet of Things technology, in order to secure the 24-hour operation of the center, according to Hikvision.

The system displays simultaneous information of ongoing games, ticketing, traffic, logistics, power grids, weather, food and hotel supplies, and medical support for the event organizers, helping them make correct decisions in responding to any emergencies.

Wang said that large-scale events like this can greatly boost the development of technological products. "The Hangzhou Asian Games provides valuable application and promotion opportunities for China's latest technology research and products, building up experience for use in the civilian sector," he noted.

US-India relationship is not as rosy as it seems on the surface

During the recently concluded G20 summit, the US and India revealed cracks on many international issues, indicating that the US-India relationship is far from being as rosy as it appears. 

As two large countries at different stages of development, India and the US have different attitudes toward a series of international issues. As a developing country, India's top priority is to achieve economic development, whereas the US is seeking to contain China and maintain its global hegemony.

First, India and the US-led West have had differing approaches on issues related with climate change and energy. India, as a developing country, has emphasized the priority for economic growth and has been more reliant on sourcing coal for its energy needs. Raj Kumar Singh, India's minister for power and renewable energy, recently accused the West of hypocrisy over energy transition, according to the Financial Times.

Second, the US and India have been struggling to reach agreements in trade negotiations. Although the US proposed the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF) and held talks with India on the initiative, India still chose not to join the IPEF trade pillar. Market access has not been agreed upon for India, which is being viewed as a crucial factor to join the trade pillar, according to media reports.

Third, although there are signs that the US supports India in taking over manufacturing transfers from China, the goal of the US is actually to bring manufacturing back and ensure employment opportunities in the US. From the Trump administration or even earlier, there have been conflicting interests between the US and India in this regard.

Fourth, the US and India encountered tensions on whether to include the Russia-Ukraine issue in the joint declaration of the G20 summit. In the first half of 2023, the trade between Russia and India increased by 190 percent year-on-year. The surging trade between India and Russia despite the US-led West's attempt to isolate Russia indicates differences in the positions of the US and India on Russia-related issues.

In co-opting India, the US mainly wants to take advantage of India's strategic position in the geopolitical landscape. India is well aware of the US' intention and understands that the US is trying to use India as a counterweight to contain China. India is also aware that the fundamental objective of the US is to maintain its own hegemonic status.

What India is doing is maintaining its own stance on major international issues while seeking to benefit from dealing with the US, such as accessing the US market and technology. India will avoid challenging the US on international issues; nevertheless, India will not sacrifice its own interests just to cater to the US.

During the G20 summit, India, in the process of setting the agenda, displayed a clear goal of competing with China to become a leader in the developing world. Despite major differences, India and China, both being major developing countries, should actively expand cooperation.

In recent years, China-India economic and trade relations have achieved continuous growth despite the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Admittedly, the issue of imbalance in China-India economic and trade relations should not be ignored, but, more importantly, both sides can see the enormous benefits that expanding and deepening cooperation can bring. Trade between China and India reached 619.69 billion yuan ($84.49 billion) during the first eight months of 2023, up 5.2 percent year-on-year, according to Chinese customs data.

At present, peace and mutually beneficial cooperation are of utmost importance for both China and India. Only by actively expanding and deepening cooperation can the two sides seize opportunities and achieve economic and social development. If India falls into the geopolitical trap set by the US and allows its relationship with China to slide from benign competition to confrontation or even worse, it will seriously harm the interests of both countries. 

In the face of great development opportunities, India should be aware of where its own interests lie and not be easily manipulated or used by the US. India should adopt a more rational approach in coordinating its relationship with China and work together to contribute to the stability and development of the developing world.

The author is an associate research fellow at the National Institute of International Strategy under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

China releases first national standard for blockchain technology to accelerate development

China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) has released the country's first national standard for blockchain technology, aiming to accelerate development of the emerging industry, according to media reports on Thursday.   

This offers a basic and universal standard to guide the application and industrial development of the country's blockchain technology, and it standardizes the functional architecture and core elements of the blockchain system, according to the MIIT. 

The newly released standard also provides a reference guide for the industry to unify the understanding of the concept of blockchain, build and improve the blockchain system, and choose and use blockchain services. The standard has been applied in more than a hundred blockchain companies.

The move further accelerates the standardization of China's blockchain industry and paves the way for its high-quality development, said an official at the MIIT, according to Xinhua.

The official said that the MIIT will continue to study and formulate standards for blockchain and deepen adoption of the standards so as to continuously improve the services level of the blockchain industry. 

China has been making efforts to boost the development of blockchain technology, which is deemed crucial for the development of the country's digital economy. 

In February, the Ministry of Science and Technology approved the establishment of the National Blockchain Technology Innovation Center in Beijing, which will focus on areas such as basic theory, software and hardware, according to Beijing Daily. The center was launched in Beijing's Zhongguancun area, dubbed "China's silicon valley," on May 10. 

Also, on Sunday at the ZGC Forum, a state-level platform for scientific and technological exchanges and cooperation, the Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commission issued a white paper on Web 3.0, which covers a wide range of technologies such as blockchain and artificial intelligence. 

Application of blockchain in China has been rising rapidly in recent years, with the market size rising to 8.46 billion yuan in 2022, according to data provider Statista. 

Mite-virus alliance could be bringing down honeybees

A mite and a virus are in cahoots in an attack on honeybee health.

The parasitic mite Varroa destructor feasts on bees of all ages and reproduces on pupae. As the mite travels through bee colonies, it can spread deformed wing virus, which can cause crippled wings and death in extreme cases. By suppressing a bee’s immunity, the virus may improve a mite’s ability to feed and breed on baby bees, researchers in Italy report March 7 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Mites were more likely to become mothers on Italian honeybee larvae with higher levels of viral infection, the team found. The number of mites that successfully laid eggs soared from 22 percent on bee larvae that developed normally to 40 percent on bees with infections severe enough to cause crippled wings. Still, mite fertility decreased again on bees with very high levels of viral infection. Understanding the complexities of this mite-virus collusion could help explain the factors leading to colony losses and protect honeybees in the future, the researchers say.

Nerve cell links severed in early stages of Alzheimer’s

In the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease, an overzealous set of proteins and cells begins to chew away at the brain’s nerve cell connections, a study in mice suggests.

That finding, described March 31 in Science, adds to a growing body of research that implicates excessive synaptic pruning, a process that shapes the young brain by culling unused connections, with disorders later in life. The new work pins the loss of nerve cell–connecting synapses on particular immune system molecules and a notorious Alzheimer’s-linked protein.
By uniting these multiple strands of evidence, the study may help explain the earliest steps in Alzheimer’s march of neural destruction. “No one has put it together in quite this way,” says neuropathologist John Trojanowski. If the same process happens in humans, the new results may point to ways to slow or stop Alzheimer’s, says Trojanowski, of the University of Pennsylvania’s medical school.

A curious observation led to this new view of neural whittling. A protein called C1q was packed around synapses in the brains of young mice genetically engineered to show signs of Alzheimer’s. And C1q was most abundant in brain areas known to suffer synapse losses as Alzheimer’s takes hold.

C1q is a member of the complement cascade, a group of immune system proteins that calls in microglia cells to gobble up synapses or cells. This pruning is essential as the brain develops. But these neural gardeners seem to spring back into action in the early stages of Alzheimer’s, neuroscientist Beth Stevens of Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard University and colleagues found. And that reactivation seems to be helped along by the Alzheimer’s-related protein amyloid-beta.

In the brains of mice that weren’t genetically engineered, injections of oligomeric A-beta, the form thought to be the most dangerous, caused C1q levels to rise. Along with this increase, synapses got destroyed, the team found. But A-beta injections didn’t harm synapses in mice lacking C1q, showing that C1q and A-beta are both needed for excessive pruning. How the two proteins exactly work together isn’t clear, Stevens says, but “they are definitely there at the right time and the right place.”

Complement proteins and microglia are known to be active in late-stage Alzheimer’s, when the inflamed brain is packed with sticky gobs of A-beta. But the new results suggest that the synapse-pruning pathway is active much earlier in the disease process, long before A-beta plaques form. “The story is extremely compelling and tight in Alzheimer’s mouse models,” says neurologist Scott Small of Columbia University.
There are reasons to think that a similar process happens in people. Autopsy studies by neurobiologist Stephen Scheff of the University of Kentucky in Lexington and colleagues, for instance, have turned up fewer synapses in the brains of people with mild cognitive impairment — thought to be an early stage of Alzheimer’s. The cause of that synapse loss could certainly be explained by changes in complement proteins or microglia, Scheff says.

Any therapy that would target this pruning process would first depend on identifying people at risk. And so far, there are no good tests to spot excessive oligomeric A-beta in the brain, says neurologist Sam Gandy of Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. “Oligomers are invisible,” he says.

But if screening methods are developed, then the prospect of stopping Alzheimer’s by stopping synapse loss is appealing, Small says. A drug that could prevent C1q or its conspirators from targeting synapses for destruction might halt the damage, for instance. “It’s easier to cure a sick cell than a dead cell,” he says.

Overactive synaptic pruning may be behind other brain disorders, Stevens suspects. She and her colleagues recently implicated a different complement cascade protein in schizophrenia (SN: 2/20/16, p. 7). “This may be a pathway that is dysregulated and playing a role in synapse loss in a host of neurological diseases, not just one,” she says. Stevens and several coauthors are involved with a company that is developing a drug to block C1q.