Category Archives: Green-tech

China to champion eco-vehicles with favorable policies

BEIJING, Sept. 23 (Xinhua) — China has further proved it is committed to cutting harmful emissions with a slew of measures to support electric vehicles, according to a State Council statement on Wednesday.

To promote growth of the burgeoning sector, more charging stations and inter-city fast-charge stations should be built, according to the statement released after a State Council executive meeting presided over by Premier Li Keqiang.

New residential complexes should ensure that all parking lots have charging facilities or space should be left for such facilities, while no less than 10 percent of parking lots in large public buildings or public car lots should have charging facilities, the statement said.

The government said it would welcome private investment in the project, it said.

China will provide tax and land support, allow privately-owned parks to collect fees and support favorable financing options for construction projects, according to the statement.

The new energy vehicle sector in China has seen explosive growth in the past two years, thanks to subsidies and tax cuts.

In the first eight months of this year, sales of new energy vehicles surged 270 percent to 108,654 vehicles, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. Enditem

 

专家访谈:斯德哥尔摩水奖获得者印度水专家辛格

北欧绿色邮报记者陈雪霏专访印度水专家辛格。今年56岁的辛格本来是学医的,但是,被分到农村当医生时,当地农民说,我们不需要医生,我们更需要水,我们要你给我们治水。于是他和当地村民一起修河修渠,植树治水,收集雨水,经过30多年的努力,他已经恢复了7条河,让1200个小村庄都有水喝,而且年轻人又回到村里种菜了。新农村就这样建立起来了。

DSC_1475

视频链接如下:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNvF9pvRJQI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNvF9pvRJQI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNvF9pvRJQI

摄像丹妮。

China seeks to combine PV and agriculture as new industrial model

BEIJING, Sept. 6 (Xinhua) — China sought to create a new model for the combination of PV power generation and modern agriculture.

With the treat of anti-dumping auction from the United States and Europe potentially restricting PV enterprises’ sales channels, creating additional demand locally is now essential for PV firms.

Shi Dinghuan, President of Association of Renewable Energy of China, said that developing agricultural PV market has important implications for the country’s agricultural transformation in the long term, while, in the short term, PV agriculture would be the valid measure for PV industry to solve the industrial dilemma. Enditem

IN-DEPTH

News Analysis: Fiscal stimulus to assume bigger growth-supportive role

 

BEIJING, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) — Although growth uncertainties abound home and abroad, China has plenty of policy options — especially on the fiscal front — to put the economy on track to deliver the around 7 percent annual target.

In its latest effort, the Ministry of Finance on Tuesday put forward multiple fiscal policies aimed at stabilizing growth, such as coordinating funds to accelerate project construction, activating idle money and widening tax breaks.

Other measures include guidance funds for small and emerging businesses, and promoting public-private-partnerships (PPP).

China is battling a property downturn, industrial overcapacity, sluggish demand and struggling exports, which dragged growth down to 7 percent for the first half (H1) of the year.

On top of that, fresh pressures from capital market volatility, currency devaluation in emerging markets, and slumping global commodity prices are further muddying growth prospects.

To achieve the full year growth target, the ministry said it will closely monitor the changing dynamics in the economy and respond with more effective and targeted fiscal policies to support growth, an area where analysts say hold vast potential to shore up growth.

Fiscal surplus for the January-July period was 383 billion (60.22 billion U.S. dollars), leaving plenty room for expansionary policies to increase the budget deficit to 2.3 percent of GDP for 2015, up from last year’s target of 2.1 percent.

Within annual budget, China could record a fiscal deficit of 2.1 trillion yuan for the August-December period, 200 billion yuan more than the same period last year, according to a recent report by China International Capital Corp. (CICC).

In addition, the government’s ongoing drive to activate unspent fiscal funds will make the expansionary fiscal policy more sustainable.

According to the finance ministry, some 13.1 billion yuan of idle fiscal funds have been retrieved and will be redistributed to growth-stabilizing sectors, and 243.8 billion yuan recovered to local budgets.

The more efficient use of idle fiscal funds is equivalent to increasing the government’s disposable funds beyond the budget without raising the government sector’s debt ratio, noted a CICC report.

Meanwhile, to dissolve debt risks of local governments, China has allowed them to replace existing debts with new bonds. The top legislature has approved the expansion of a debt swap program for local governments worth 3.2 trillion yuan in 2015.

On the back of such fiscal support, China has stepped up spending on key infrastructure such as railways in the western regions, renovation of substandard housing and underground utilities, which have all helped boost economic activity already.

“We think infrastructure-investment growth will likely be revived from July’s 16 percent year on year to 20 percent in the coming months, which in turn will provide, at the very least, a counterbalance against China’s ongoing property and heavy industry downturn,” noted a UBS report.

In an assuring message to the market, China’s top economic planner on Monday said the world’s second largest economy is stabilizing and turning for the better, citing stabilizing power use, rail freight and a warming property market as proof for the improvement.

“The economic operation is expected to maintain steady expansion to realize the full-year growth target,” the National Development and Reform Commission said. Enditem

China’s new energy vehicle output soars in Aug.

BEIJING, Sept. 8 (Xinhua) — China’s output of new energy vehicles soared nearly 400 percent year on year in August to 24,500 units, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said on Tuesday in a statement on its website.

The new energy vehicle output includes 9,175 pure electric passenger cars and 6,778 hybrid passenger cars, both up around 300 percent year on year. Production of pure electric and hybrid commercial vehicles stood at 6,446 and 2,142 units respectively in August, up 2,100 and 148 percent year on year.

China produced a total of 123,500 new energy vehicles from January to August, up 300 percent over the same period of last year, including 52,100 pure electric passenger cars, 32,800 hybrid passenger cars, 28,300 pure electric commercial vehicles and 10,200 hybrid commercial vehicles. Enditem

 

 

China scraps dividend tax for long-term investors

 

BEIJING, Sept. 7 (Xinhua) — Chinese investors holding a stock for more than one year will be exempted from a 5-percent dividend tax from Tuesday, authorities said.

Those who have held a stock for one month or less will have to pay 20 percent of the dividend they receive as income tax when they sell the stock, the Ministry of Finance said Monday in a statement jointly released with the country’s taxation authority and the securities regulator.

People who have held a stock for over one month to one year will have to pay a 10 percent dividend tax when they sell the stock, the statement said.

This move is part of the government’s efforts to promote long-term investment following a stock market rout since mid-June.

The Shanghai Composite has plunged more than 40 percent from a peak seen on June 12. Enditem

 

 

China seeks to combine PV and agriculture as new industrial model

 

BEIJING, Sept. 6 (Xinhua) — China sought to create a new model for the combination of PV power generation and modern agriculture.

With the treat of anti-dumping auction from the United States and Europe potentially restricting PV enterprises’ sales channels, creating additional demand locally is now essential for PV firms.

Shi Dinghuan, President of Association of Renewable Energy of China, said that developing agricultural PV market has important implications for the country’s agricultural transformation in the long term, while, in the short term, PV agriculture would be the valid measure for PV industry to solve the industrial dilemma. Enditem

 

 

 

IN-DEPTH

 

News Analysis: Fiscal stimulus to assume bigger growth-supportive role

 

BEIJING, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) — Although growth uncertainties abound home and abroad, China has plenty of policy options — especially on the fiscal front — to put the economy on track to deliver the around 7 percent annual target.

In its latest effort, the Ministry of Finance on Tuesday put forward multiple fiscal policies aimed at stabilizing growth, such as coordinating funds to accelerate project construction, activating idle money and widening tax breaks.

Other measures include guidance funds for small and emerging businesses, and promoting public-private-partnerships (PPP).

China is battling a property downturn, industrial overcapacity, sluggish demand and struggling exports, which dragged growth down to 7 percent for the first half (H1) of the year.

On top of that, fresh pressures from capital market volatility, currency devaluation in emerging markets, and slumping global commodity prices are further muddying growth prospects.

To achieve the full year growth target, the ministry said it will closely monitor the changing dynamics in the economy and respond with more effective and targeted fiscal policies to support growth, an area where analysts say hold vast potential to shore up growth.

Fiscal surplus for the January-July period was 383 billion (60.22 billion U.S. dollars), leaving plenty room for expansionary policies to increase the budget deficit to 2.3 percent of GDP for 2015, up from last year’s target of 2.1 percent.

Within annual budget, China could record a fiscal deficit of 2.1 trillion yuan for the August-December period, 200 billion yuan more than the same period last year, according to a recent report by China International Capital Corp. (CICC).

In addition, the government’s ongoing drive to activate unspent fiscal funds will make the expansionary fiscal policy more sustainable.

According to the finance ministry, some 13.1 billion yuan of idle fiscal funds have been retrieved and will be redistributed to growth-stabilizing sectors, and 243.8 billion yuan recovered to local budgets.

The more efficient use of idle fiscal funds is equivalent to increasing the government’s disposable funds beyond the budget without raising the government sector’s debt ratio, noted a CICC report.

Meanwhile, to dissolve debt risks of local governments, China has allowed them to replace existing debts with new bonds. The top legislature has approved the expansion of a debt swap program for local governments worth 3.2 trillion yuan in 2015.

On the back of such fiscal support, China has stepped up spending on key infrastructure such as railways in the western regions, renovation of substandard housing and underground utilities, which have all helped boost economic activity already.

“We think infrastructure-investment growth will likely be revived from July’s 16 percent year on year to 20 percent in the coming months, which in turn will provide, at the very least, a counterbalance against China’s ongoing property and heavy industry downturn,” noted a UBS report.

In an assuring message to the market, China’s top economic planner on Monday said the world’s second largest economy is stabilizing and turning for the better, citing stabilizing power use, rail freight and a warming property market as proof for the improvement.

“The economic operation is expected to maintain steady expansion to realize the full-year growth target,” the National Development and Reform Commission said. Enditem

 

 

Diabetes medication could be used to treat alcohol dependence

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Stockholm, Sept. 12(Greenpost)–A new study on mice and rats at Sahlgrenska Academy shows that a medication used for diabetes and obesity also could be a valuable tool for the treatment of alcohol dependence.

gothenburg-sweden Alcohol dependence causes morbidity as well as mortality and is –major health problem in today’s society. The costs for alcohol dependence in Sweden are estimated to be around SEK 45 billion per year. Nearly 5 percent of the adult population in Sweden have been diagnosed with alcohol dependence, which corresponds to approximately 300 000 people. Even more Swedes have harmful alcohol consumption. Indeed, approximately 15 percent consume more than 14 standard drinks per week (men) or more than nine standard drinks per week (women).

images (1)A new study at Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, shows that interfering with the hormone GLP-1 could be a target for treating alcohol dependence, which is an entirely novel aspect.

Researchers have found that a medication that resemble GLP-1, which is used to treat type 2 diabetes as well as obesity, also could be used to treat alcohol dependence.

Usually, dopamine is released in the brain’s reward center in response to drinking alcohol, which leads to a sense of euphoria. The GLP-1-like substance prevents the ability of alcohol to increase dopamine in reward areas in the mice, suggesting that they no longer experience a reward from alcohol. In addition the diabetes medication caused the rats to decreases their alcohol intake, as well as reduced the motivation to drink alcohol in rats that were bred to drink a lot of alcohol. The medication also prevents relapse drinking in rats, which is major problem for alcohol dependent individuals.

“The GLP-1-like substance reduced the alcohol consumption by 30-40 percent in rats that drank large quantities of alcohol for several months” says Elisabet Jerlhag, researcher at Sahlgrenska Academy.

imagesSimilar mechanisms appear to regulate alcohol dependence and binge eating. The hormone GLP-1 is released from the intestines when we eat and causes satiety. It is also released in the brain and thereby reduces food intake.

“The results of the present study suggest that the physiological role of GLP-1 extends beyond glucose homeostasis and food intake regulation and includes modulation of development of alcohol dependence. In addition we suggest that medications that resemble GLP-1 could be used to treat alcohol dependence in humans. This will now be studied further,” says Elisabet Jerlhag at Sahlgrenska Academy.

The article The glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist liraglutide attenuates the reinforcing properties of alcohol in rodents was published in the journal Addict Biology on August 25.

Link to article: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26303264

 

NLSDAYS 2016 to be held on September 13-15

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Stockholm, Sept. 11(Greenpost)–At the end of 2015 Nordic Life Science Days, it was announced that the 2016 NLSDAYS is scheduled to be held on Sept. 13-15.

IMG_0465Jonas Ekstrand told Green Post that this was the third year that NLSDAYS was held in Stockholm, the largest event in life science field in the Nordic region.

The conference is a platform to provide business development and cooperation opportunities for academia, researchers, clinics and manufacturers.

This year showed the largest number of delegates and companies compared with the previous two years. Unfortunately the Chinese group wasn’t able to come due to the failure of getting visas.

Of course Chinese National Medicine Administration delegates had a look at the conference.

This year set up a lot of face-to face talk rooms so that people can really effectively talk with each other.

IMG_0485 IMG_0492At the end of the conference, Nordic Stars Awards were awarded to AMRA, BerGenBio and Nexstim companies.

China to draw international experience in urbanization

DALIAN, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) — Premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday welcomed deeper cooperation between developed and developing nations to improve China’s urban development and planning.

“Each and every country has its own unique strengths, or comparative strengths, in its urbanization process,” Li told business leaders during the annual meeting of the New Champions, also known as the Summer Davos Forum.

Noting China’s urbanization rate at only 55 percent, the premier said China’s urbanization remains a long-term process and will provide vast room for domestic demand.

Acknowledging challenges in rapid urbanization, Li said China will press ahead with the large-scale renovation of low standard housing, where about 100 million urban residents deserve modern living conditions.

The premier added that China is developing underground infrastructure, with latest progress having been made in underground urban utility pipeline networks.

The Summer Davos Forum is being held from Sept. 9-11 in China’s northeastern city of Dalian. Li is expected to give a keynote speech on Thursday. Enditem

Female gamers a new risk group for overweight

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Young women who play computer games are a new risk group for developing overweight and obesity. This is the finding of a study that includes more than 2,500 Swedes in their twenties, according to a press release from Sahlgrenska Academy in Gothenburg.

In the current study, around 2,500 young adults between the ages of 20 and 24 responded to a survey on three different occasions: in 2007, 2008 and 2012. Researchers at Sahlgrenska Academy used the survey to investigate whether the amount of time young people spend e-mailing, chatting or playing computer games in their free time affects their BMI.

The results show that women of normal weight who played computer games for at least 1 hour a day were more likely to develop overweight (measured as a BMI over 25) during the five-year study period compared with women who did not play.

“The increased BMI in those who played computer games for more than two hours a day would for a young woman of average height and weight equal an additional weight gain of 3.7 kilos. That calculation takes other risk factors for obesity into account, such as age, occupation, total daily computer time, physical activity during free time, sleep and perceived social support,” says Sara Thomée, researcher at Sahlgrenska Academy.

The same development was not found in men. It is unclear why only women gained weight, according to Sara Thomée, who says further studies are needed to verify the results and identify possible causes.

Gothenburg researchers still conclude that young female gamers may be an important target group for preventive public health initiatives.

The article “Leisure time computer use and overweight development in young adults – a prospective study” was published in the scientific journal BMC Public Health on September 2.

Link to article: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/15/839

Video: Marshall Islands’ President Loeak speaks at World Water Week

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Stockholm, Sept. 8(Greenpost)–Marshall Islands’ President Christopher Loeak spoke at the World water week in Stockholm about the situation in his country.

Marshall Islands’ President Christopher Loeak spoke at the World water week in Stockholm about the situation in his country on Aug. 24, 2015, filmed by Anneli Larsson.

“Although the future of my country is bleak, we are optimistic people.” said Loeak.

He said they have taken a lot of measures to deal with the climate change including using solar energy and treating waste water.

Nanoparticles – small but unique

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Stockholm, Sept. 8 (Greenpost)–Scientists at Chalmers University of Technology  have developed a new way to study nanoparticles one at a time, and have discovered that individual particles that may seem identical in fact can have very different properties, according to news reaching here from Gothenburg.

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Christoph Langhammer, Associate Professor at the Department of Applied Physics  Photographer / Source  Sabina Johansson

The results, which may prove to be important when developing new materials or applications such as hydrogen sensors for fuel cell cars, will be published in Nature Materials.

“We were able to show that you gain deeper insights into the physics of how nanomaterials interact with molecules in their environment by looking at the individual nanoparticle as opposed to looking at many of them at the same time, which is what is usually done,” said Associate Professor Christoph Langhammer, who led the project.

By applying a new experimental approach called plasmonic nanospectroscopy, the group studied hydrogen absorption into single palladium nanoparticles.

They found that particles with exactly the same shape and size may exhibit differences as great as 40 millibars in the pressure at which hydrogen is absorbed.

The development of sensors that can detect hydrogen leaks in fuel cell powered cars is one example of where this new understanding could become valuable in the future.

“One main challenge when working on hydrogen sensors is to design materials whose response to hydrogen is as linear and reversible as possible. In that way, the gained fundamental understanding of the reasons underlying the differences between seemingly identical individual particles and how this makes the response irreversible in a certain hydrogen concentration range can be helpful,” said  Langhammer.

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Caption: A single gold plasmonic nanoantenna probes the hydrogen absorption in an adjacent palladium nanocube. Illustration: Ella Marushchenko and Alex Tokarev¨ Photographer / Source  Karin Weijdegård

Others have looked at single nanoparticles one at a time, but the new approach introduced by the Chalmers team uses visible light with low intensity to study the particles. This means that the method is non-invasive and does not disturb the system it is investigating by, for example, heating it up.

“When studying individual nanoparticles you have to send some kind of probe to ask the particle ‘what are you doing?’. This usually means focusing a beam of high-energy electrons or photons or a mechanical probe onto a very tiny volume. You then quickly get very high energy densities, which might perturb the process you want to look at.” said Langhammer.

” This effect is minimized in our new approach, which is also compatible with ambient conditions, meaning that we can study nanoparticles one at a time in as close to a realistic environment as possible.”

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Tina Gschneidtner, Kasper Moth-Poulsen, Svetlana Syrenova and Christoph LanghammerPhotographer / Source  Karin Weijdegård

Even though they have now reached the level where their results are ready to be published, Christoph Langhammer believes they have just scratched the surface of what their discovery and developed experimental methodology will lead to in relation to further research. He hopes that they have helped to establish a new experimental paradigm, where looking at nanoparticles individually will become standard in the scientific world.

“It is not good enough to look at, and thus obtain an average of, hundreds or millions of particles if you want to understand the details of how nanoparticles behave in different environments and applications. You have to look at individual ones, and we have found a new way to do that.” he added.

“My own long-term vision is to apply our method to more complex processes and materials, and to push the limits in terms of how small nanoparticles can be for us to be able to measure them. Hopefully, along the way, we will gain even deeper insights into the fascinating world of nanomaterials.”

The paper Hydride formation thermodynamics and hysteresis in individual Pd nanocrystals with different size and shape is published online in Nature Materials on September 7.

 

Swedish PM says we cannot live without water

By Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Stockholm, Sept. 7(Greenpost)–Swedish Prime Minister said at the World Water Week that man cannot live without water.

Filmed by Anneli Larsson on Aug. 24, 2015 in Stockholm.

He stressed the importance of having clean water for life. He also recalled the journey of Sweden’s history of cleaning water.

He called on the people all over the world to join hands to provide clean water and face climate change.

China looks forward to adoption of post-2015 development agenda at UN summit

UNITED NATIONS, Sept. 1 (Greenpost) — A Chinese envoy to the United Nations on Tuesday said China looks forward to the successful adoption of the post-2015 development agenda at the UN summit, stressing it will “guide International cooperation for development.”

The remarks were made by Wang Min, China’s deputy permanent representative to the UN, at a meeting of the 69th session of the UN General Assembly.

“China welcomes the adoption by the General Assembly of the resolution on the draft Outcome Document of the United Nations summit for the adoption of the post-2015 development agenda to transmit the post-2015 development agenda agreed by consensus to the summit for its consideration and adoption,” said Wang. “As a development agenda that will guide international cooperation for development in the next 15 years, the post-2015 development agenda is of profound historical significance.”

The document also reaffirms the purposes and principles of the charter of the United Nations and the principle of the common but differentiated responsibilities among other basic principles, while placing continued focus on poverty eradication, he said.

The post-2015 development agenda will not only give renewed impetus to international cooperation for development, but also lay a solid foundation for a successful UN summit of the agenda’s adoption, he said. “China looks forward to the successful adoption of the post-2015 development agenda at the UN summit.”

Moreover, he assured that “China is ready to join others in untiring efforts to implement the post-2015 development agenda and revitalize international cooperation for development.”

In August, negotiators from 193 UN member states agreed on a draft blueprint for sustainable development that will last through 2030. The document outlines 17 ambitious Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) ranging from issues of poverty, gender equality and economic development to climate change and ocean resource protection. Enditem

Source Xinhua

Editor  Xuefei Chen Axelsson

Xinhua Insight: Sharing economy shaking up business in China

   BEIJING, Aug. 25 (Xinhua) — As Uber and Airbnb expand in China, homegrown online ventures are already taking a slice of the growing sharing economy.

Chen Chi, chief executive officer of the short-term home-rental site Xiaozhu.com, shrugged off the competition Airbnb might bring when the apartment-sharing service announced last Wednesday that it planned to enter the China market.

Instead of treating Airbnb as a threat to emerging short-term rental firms such as Xiaozhu and Tujia, Chen welcomes the development as an opportunity for China to embrace the sharing economy.

An increasing number of Internet startups in China are profiting by sharing access to resources that they do not actually own, from home rentals to car pooling to catering.

“Airbnb has recognized how fast the sharing economy is growing in China,” Chen said.

MORE FOR LESS

At its core, the sharing economy brings together excess capacity of products or services to “share” them. Uber and Didi take advantage of the fact that individually owned cars spend a lot of time parked up, going nowhere. Airbnb and Xiaozhu rent out rooms when the owners are not staying in them.

The sharing economy in China has already gone far beyond car pooling and home rentals. Renren Delivery, for example, connects demand for package deliveries with “freelance” couriers. Anyone can earn a fee by picking up a package and carrying it to its destination.

Knowledge can be shared too. Zaih.com, launched this year, tries to connect people with expertise — whether in art, science or lifestyle — with people seeking advice. Those in need of professional help can click a button, schedule a face-to-face meeting with experts, and pay them a fee of about 50 U.S. dollars for a consultation.

Capital can work the same way. Peer-to-peer (P2P) lending connects individuals and small businesses who need money directly to investors with cash to spare; essentially, access to idle funds.

According to research agency 01caijing, P2P in China expanded 172 percent to 300 billion yuan (47 billion U.S. dollars) in 2014, with more than 1,500 market players similar to Lending Club in the United States or Zopa in the United Kingdom.

“The sharing economy is revolutionizing many sectors in China,” said venture capitalist Li Xiao, a founder of Joy Capital, the firm that led a 60-million-U.S.-dollar round of financing for Xiaozhu. “And it’s still accelerating.”

CHANGING ENVIRONMENT

When Xiaozhu started out in 2012, many questioned whether the Airbnb model would prosper in China. The doubters said the Chinese would never feel comfortable with strangers in their homes.

But Chen Chi was not deterred and after two years, Xiaozhu’s profits have increased dramatically, with six time more transactions so far this year than last year.

Better individual credit reporting has helped build trust, the very foundation of sharing, Chen said.

Individual credit checks have never been a significant factor in evaluating credit worthiness in China. Before this year, the country had only one recognized credit bureau, an institution under the country’s central bank.

With the growth of Internet finance, however, big players such as Alibaba and JD.com are very interested in personal credit reporting. Alibaba’s Ant Financial launched credit scoring service Sesame Credit in January while rival JD.com partnered with U.S. firm ZestFinance in June to provide similar services.

According to Li Xiao, culture is simply becoming more socialized. There was a time when everyone wanted standard products, Li said, but as the economy grows, people crave something different: a conversation with an insightful taxi driver, for example, or a meal specially cooked to individual requirements.

Chen Chi himself is a Xiaozhu host. In the last three years, his guests have included a young student back from studying abroad, a music lover who gave up everything in the pursuit of stardom, and an elderly woman who offered to wash his clothes. Hosting taught him things about the world that he would never have learned through his immediate social circle.

“When we talk about the sharing economy, we always focus on the economy side, but it also contains the sharing part — that is, being kind to strangers,” he said. “I’m addicted to it.”

REGULATORY UNCERTAINTY

While the sharing economy is good for entrepreneurs, it threatens many industry incumbents, which puts pressure on authorities to regulate.

Executives of ride-sharing services Uber China, Didi, and Kuaidi have been summoned by authorities many times in the past few months to discuss the legality of their operations without taxi licenses.

Regulation of lodging-sharing services in China is even more opaque. Companies like Xiaozhu are operating in a gray area in which there are no rules specifying how hosts pay taxes on what they earn — so they simply don’t pay.

“Technology always outpaces regulation. Even abroad, regulations are still evolving,” Li Xiao said, “but I think everyone supports things that are fundamentally good for society.”

After a meeting in July, Chinese leaders declared that the country’s Internet Plus strategy of integrating online business models with traditional industries meant it needed to be made easier for people to launch online enterprises. While the authorities are still figuring out how to handle the sharing economy, Chen Chi is confident that Xiaozhu et al will grow, just like their foreign counterparts.

“Airbnb has been around for eight years and Xiaozhu for just three. It’s only a matter of time,” he said. Enditem