1. China's environmental logo (commonly known as "Ten Rings"), the graphic consists of green mountains, green water, the sun in the center and ten surrounding rings. The central structure of the figure represents the environment on which human beings live. The ten rings on the periphery are closely integrated and interlocking, indicating public participation and joint protection of the environment. At the same time, the word "ring" in the ten rings is consistent with the word "ring" in the environment. "The same word means "all people unite to jointly protect the environment on which human beings live"
2. The ten-ring mark (ten-ring I-shaped mark) refers to the product or other products. A "certification trademark" on the packaging. It indicates that the product not only meets the quality requirements, but also meets specific environmental protection requirements. Compared with similar products, it has environmental advantages such as less toxicity and less harm, saving resources and energy. Certifiable product categories include: Office equipment, building materials, home appliances, daily necessities, office supplies, automobiles, furniture, textiles, footwear, etc.
Environmental pollution:
The main cause of China's increasingly serious environmental pollution is accompanied by Primary energy consumption has increased significantly due to rapid development, and most of it is coal-fired. Like other East Asian countries, China relies on exports to drive economic development; while focusing on improving industrial productivity, it also reduces pollutants. There are basically no ecological protection and pollution control measures for emissions. In terms of biological resources, China has developed a biodiversity action plan to protect threatened species and habitats.
For China’s annual environmental pollution. There are different statistics on the losses caused by environmental pollution: the State Environmental Protection Administration stated that pollution losses reached 3% of GDP in 2004; other estimates believe that environmental losses reached 5-10% of GDP, with 358,000 people dying each year due to air pollution. People.
According to reports, Xie Fuzhan, director of China’s National Bureau of Statistics, confirmed that the government will no longer publish green GDP data. The Wall Street Journal stated that data on the environmental costs of China’s economic growth will hinder the performance of local officials. Assessment and image, which are controversial and overly sensitive, have been resisted by local government officials.