With 80 GHz through China
This time, our 80-GHz tour took me to the heart of China – to Baotou and Changchun, to be exact.
Baotou has approximately 2.1 million inhabitants and is one of the most important industrial cities in Inner Mongolia. The city is mainly known for its mining and extraction of rare earths. Approximately 70% of global demand is produced here. Rare earth elements are needed in large quantities for the production of smartphone and television displays as well as for the magnets of high-performance electric motors, e.g. for electric cars. The extraction of the raw materials produces waste, a mixture of slag and aggressive acids, which is stored in an artificial lake about 10 km outside the city. This has a huge environmental impact. So I was sort of expecting to see a lot of unpleasant things there. But when I arrived in the city, I was very surprised: awaiting us was a very well developed infrastructure, a beautiful, modern airport and a fantastic superhighway to our 5-star hotel.
A colleague had to translate, because many of the participants could not have followed an English-language presentation. Since the Chinese PowerPoint version was also used, it was quite good that by now I was nearly able to give the presentation from memory. ;-)
In the evening a dinner was held in the seminar room – on round tables with all kinds of different dishes, as is common in China. There were no chicken feet, jellyfish or snakes, so I was able to enjoy everything. ;-) Chinese liquors and beer were served, as well as different juices.
At such events in China, small groups always go to the hosts to clink glasses. It is then customary to drink the glass completely empty. After a while that becomes increasingly difficult. What helps, however, is that the beer has only 2.5% alcohol and the liquor is poured into very small glasses – fortunately. The event then ended quite abruptly at 9 p.m., which was good.
Then we started home, first flying from Changchun to Beijing and from there to Frankfurt.