Forums > Living in Kunming > Tonight's Kundu Fight @crazy
You must be mistaken. In this harmonious land of 5,000 years of civilization there cannot be violence!
Surely those guys were Thais or Koreans or from Xinjiang, if they had knives, other wise I'd say you had too much fine wine to drink. laotou is right, Kundu is not a nice place even for one with three black belts in different martial arts.
Did you ride your scooter there? Which girl did you bring, the laowai or the Chinese?
Forums > Living in Kunming > New apartment TAX? The second link above has a tax table with the basis in square meters.
Forums > Living in Kunming > New apartment TAX? Try this source. I could not find a property transfer or sales tax indicated. One of the difficulties is China's propensity to use fiscal means, taxes, to manage the economy.I don't try to stay current any more so I am not sure if the memory I have of the sort of tax you are looking for is real. They could have done this kind of tax to 'cool' housing speculation.
www.deloitte.com/[...]
Forums > Living in Kunming > Studying + Teaching part-time Working on student visa is NOT a good idea. It is illegal and, if caught, would probably insure your newly learned Chinese skills could only be used outside of China.
BTW, you wrote a blabla, nearly 800 word posting to tell the world you plan on engaging in an illegal activity. Can you give us your passport number, country, perhaps a photo? duh...
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted by@bilingualexpat: No need to apologize, ad hominem attacks to be expected when one hold contrarian positions on common knowledge topics and engages in discussions.
Another fun fact for you: In 2016, China ADDED 48GW, or 5.4%, to production capacity of coal fired electricity generation.
To be fair, power production stats in China are soft at best. Circa 2008, when GDP growth around the world were flat or declining, China posted GDP increase of 6.5% AND a decline in electricity production of 16% for the same period. WTF? Trends for GDP and electricity heretofore had consistently tracked. For 4-6 months electricity production was omitted from monthly and quarterly reports.
Sifting through reports, it is difficult find evidence of any reduction in either aggregate capacity or generation. In fact, the Paris deal allows China to keep increasing her carbon footprint until it peaks in 2030. Only then has China agreed to begin reducing use of coal.
China has been importing coal from NORK, In June, China announced she would curtail such imports. Given that in June the demand for coal drops significantly, I believe China.
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted by@bilingualexpat: Your claim "now you're arguing against EV production in China" is a figment of your ideology warped thought process. I know you need to attack me rather than deal with the unsustainability of EV production but so be it.
You claim a 9% reduction in coal production AND then claim coal consumption has fallen 4.7%. Interesting. Do you seriously claim production has declined so much more than use? Does that make sense?
How does China increase electric generation capacity using coal 5.4% while producing less coal, 9%, and consuming less, 4.7%, coal?
I will leave it to you to dive into the study of China's inconsistent economic statistics. I've been doing it for more than 30 years and usually hit a WTF point sooner than later.
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted by"China is banning traditional auto engines. Its aim: electric car domination"
www.latimes.com/[...]
(Note: This article was posted 170911 @ 6pm PDT - About 18 hours AFTER my first comment above)
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted by@Alien: Who do you think? Try a guess.
China to phase out fossil fuel cars, boost domestic electric vehicle industry
Posted byIn 2016, 59% of China's electricity was produced in coal fired plants.
17% of the electricity produced by wind power went unused in China.
In 2016, China increased total electrical power production capacity 7.7% and coal production capacity grew 5.4%, or 39% of the capacity increase.
Unlike Norway, China's hydro generation is only 21% of capacity.
The underlying problem is a power grid built without market considerations. Forcing increased demand for electricity consumption will not ease environmental pressures.