Now that the country can tolerate slower growth and has completed its once-a-decade leadership shuffle, China has an opportunity to promote a greener development.
When former Chinese President Hu Jintao announced a plan to build a more beautiful China, caring for the nation's 3 million square kilometers of marine territory was no small part.
While celebrating the company's 150th anniversary this year, leaders of German industrial giant Bayer Group said they are proud of its innovative products that have helped improve people's lives.
Marjorie Yang can still remember the shock she had when finding out that the most expensive medicine in a public health center at a small town in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region was ice. "This means that the people living there almost had no medicine at all, which is beyond imagination," she said.
Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying increased spending on the poor and elderly in his government's first budget, offering a growth boost to an economy burdened with record housing costs.
The German Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai recently donated 200,000 yuan ($32,103) to support the education of needy Chinese students.
As well as raising more complaints on food safety, the Chinese are becoming increasingly concerned about what they eat after a series of food safety scandals.
Foshan made a good start last year on its three-year master plan to modernize the city's industrial chain by securing a large number of investment projects.
Despite the global economic slowdown, Foshan received growing capital flows from home and abroad last year, showing its appeal to investors is still strong.
Zongshen Industrial Group recently signed an agreement with the government of Foshan to set up a South China Germany Center in the city's Sino-German Industrial Services Zone.
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