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2007 Aug 23 Alarming Stats

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Beijing
10.4%
The average rise in Beijing housing prices over the past month

15
The number of trees blown over on Dongzhimenwai Dajie during the freak storm that hit Beijing two Sundays ago.

40
The maximum number of students that Beijing's Municipal Education Commission has set for primary and middle school classes across the city.

153
The number of bottles of fake alcohol discovered at a Houhai Bar this week

400
The number of residents whose crumbling Houhai residences will be tastefully restored for free.

5,1000,000
The number of “liudong renkou” or people from out of town (and without a Beijing hukou) living in Beijing. The number has pushed Beijing’s population to over 17 million.

11,896,000 Kilowatts
New record for the amount of power being used in Beijing at any one moment, reached on the afternoon of Aug 21 as everyone decided to turn on their air conditioners.

60,000,000
The number of passengers expected to pass through Beijing International Airport next year.

China
1
China’s world ranking in terms of the amount of spending on porn

4
The number of pandas born in Sichuan on one day last week

306
The number of Chinese people killed by lightning during the past three weeks

310,000,000
The number of Chinese people affected by natural disasters this year

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  • Snowmen Battle a Shocking Rise in Obesity Rates

    Officials fear this obesity epidemic could mean dire consequences for the snow people community.

    The rate of obesity in Beijing’s snow people population has risen by approximately 95% in the last 5 weeks, government officials say.

  • Spring Festival Text Messages

    Aside from feasting, watching Zhang Ziyi's poor attempt at lip-syncing on TV and letting off truckloads of fireworks, Beijingers were also busy sending off text messages to friends and family on Spring Festival eve. The official numbers haven't been announced yet, but China's Ministry of Information Industry (MII) was forecasting that across the country more than 17 billion Spring Festival greeting messages would be sent via mobile phone over the holiday season. In Beijing alone 600 million text messages were sent on Chuxi (Spring Festival Eve), which works out at close to 38 texts per person. This number is up from 400 million last year.

    As in previous years, a contest aimed at discovery the best Spring Festival text message was held.

  • Get Ready for Grit

    Spring is right around the corner, and with that comes the annual spring sandstorm season. For newbies to Beijing, this means a few months of dust and dirt blowing through town like a vacuum cleaner on reverse, and when it gets bad, conditions can be downright apocalyptic.

    2008 is looking especially grim, according to the Beijing Meteorological Station, which is predicting as many as 11 days of dust storms this year due to a warm winter and less rainfall in the desert areas surrounding the capital.

    Xinhua reports that recent years have seen an average of 9.7 days of dust storms, though last year saw only three blow through town. But because 2007 saw 11 percent less precipitation than the average levels of previous years, spring is indeed looking like gritty.

    Better dust off those facemasks now.

  • Holy Smoke, Beijing!

    pollution

    Break out the masks, folks!

    According to the State Environmental Protection Administration, the brown haze that descended on our fair city hit a whopping 421 on the Air Pollution Index today. To put that in perspective, on a good day it hovers between 50-150. On a bad day, we're looking at 200 or so.

    In fact, today's smog is so bad that the American Environmental Protection Agency rates it as Condition Maroon - or Hazardous. They even go so far as to advise "AQI values over 300 trigger health warnings of emergency conditions. The entire population is more likely to be affected." Doctors recommend not undertaking physical exercise outside, and limiting exposure to the pollution.

    Not a day to be leaving the house, if you can avoid it. And if you do, make sure you mask up!

  • Beijing by Numbers

    2, 889, 900

    Number of passenger trips recorded on Beijing's subway system last Friday, Nov 16. A new record for the swamped system whose load has increased dramatically since last month when line 5 opened for business and fares were reduced to 2 kuai. As we discovered recently when trying to take a train home from the Dawang Lu station, Fridays are the busiest days. Two weeks ago during the evening peak hour the station was closed for 20 minutes due to platform overcrowding.

    We have People's Daily to thank for this prize quote from a Beijing Subway official:

     

    "Passengers should go to work earlier and come back home later than usual, so as to avoid transport peak."

     

    34.5

    Percent of the city's commuters choosing public transport. This is the first time this number has exceeded the percentage of people driving a private vehicle to work (32) since figures were first recorded in 2001

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