China Daily (Hong Kong)

What a difference a century makes

- Greg Fountain

Earlier this summer, a piloted fixed-wing aircraft called Solar Impulse completed the first-ever circumnavi­gation of the Earth using nothing but the power of the sun.

The company behind it, ABB, is the world’s largest builder of electricit­y grids, making most of its estimated $48.1 billion fortune from power and automation technology.

Shortly after its aircraft triumphant­ly touched down in Abu Dhabi on July 26, I happened upon a PR piece, attributed to ABB’s President and CEO Ulrich Spiesshofe­r.

What struck me most about Spiesshofe­r’s spiel was a paragraph describing the founding of ABB, 125 years ago, “by two enterprisi­ng entreprene­urs” who wanted

This Day, That Year

ItemfromAu­g12,1990,in ChinaDaily:Millionsof farmersare­turningtom­ink breedingin­theracetom­ake money....

Thefarmers’enthusiasm forminkbre­edingwas sparkedwhe­ntheyreali­zed thattheiri­ncomecould reachalmos­t2,000yuana yearbyenga­gingintheb­usiness.

China is speeding up the transforma­tion of its agricultur­e developmen­t model from “traditiona­l” to “mod- “to explore the potential of a promising new technology called electricit­y”.

Wow, I thought. How far we have come!

In a little over a century mankind has transforme­d the world, from one lit by candles and oil lamps where the fastest forms of travel were horseback and steamship, to the globalized, homogenize­d sphere of today, which would be unrecogniz­able to all who came before.

And all of it started with electricit­y.

But about 85 percent of the world’s energy — by which, of course, we largely mean electricit­y — comes from sources that will eventually be depleted.

That’s not to mention the impact that our modern way of living has on the world’s reserves of rare earth elements — those magic metals that are used in everything from smartphone­s to MRI machines, and even the batteries that powered Solar

“It is a waste of time staying at home during summer vacation. We could go outside and join in public activities.”

college student in Shijiazhua­ng, Hebei province

ern” in an effort to guarantee food supplies and farmers’ incomes.

Following the launch of agricultur­al reforms in the 1980s and the developmen­t of internatio­nal trade later, Chinese farmers are enjoying more ways of making money than before.

In Yunnan province, which is known as China’s botanic garden, mushroom exports have become a major source of income for farmers.

The province sells some Impulse on its groundbrea­king trip around the Earth.

We live on a finite planet, filled with a finite amount of things. No well is bottomless and all wells will eventually run dry — so what happens when they do?

The rebuttal I am often given is that our planet’s resources will last for many decades to come and will probably far outlast anyone alive today.

Yet, what happens once the barrel is empty? Scraped clean by an ever more avaricious species of upright primates that, not so long ago on the geological time scale, knew nothing of electricit­y, metalwork or any of the apparent magic that can be conjured by exploiting the elements found within the Earth’s crust?

Perhaps human ingenuity will ride to the rescue — Spiesshofe­r himself argues that “technology is not to be feared or resisted” and the success of Solar Impulse 300 metric tons of mushrooms to domestic and overseas markets every day.

In Karamay, the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, sturgeon breeding is attracting a lot of investor interest.

Lvcheng Agricultur­e Co, based in Karamay, has proves that “we can run the world without consuming the Earth”.

Or perhaps in another 125 years, once the oil has dried up and the last of those elusive elements have been scoured from under our feet, a lone survivor will stand and stare across the desolation, wondering where it all went so wrong.

And then he’ll look up, and he’ll see through the haze a shadow passing across the face of the sun, as an unmanned descendant of that aircraft once known as Solar Impulse completes another pointless circumnavi­gation of the Earth, for the 1,000th time.

Perhaps.

Contact the writer at gregory@chinadaily.com.cn

Check out an audio version of this article.

already invested 20 million yuan ($3 million) in a sturgeon greenhouse breeding base in the city. It is expected to bring in 7.5 million yuan in annual revenue.

Farmers are also looking at selling their produce via e-commerce platforms nationwide.

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