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CHINA-BEIJING-TIANJIN-JINGWEI HIRAIN-DEVELOPMENT (CN)

CHINA-BEIJING-TIANJIN-JINGWEI HIRAIN-DEVELOPMENT (CN)

(240228) -- TIANJIN, Feb. 28, 2024 (Xinhua) -- An aerial drone photo taken on Feb. 26, 2024 shows a view outside the Tianjin R&D Center of Beijing Jingwei Hirain Technologies Co., Inc. in Tianjin, north China. The center is about only one kilometer away from Tianjin South Railway Station. Since the beginning of this year, the Tianjin factory of Beijing Jingwei Hirain Technologies Co., Inc., located in the Xiqing economic and technological development zone in Tianjin, has been receiving continuous orders. The factory resumed work ahead of schedule on the fifth day of the Chinese New Year. Jingwei Hirain is a leading enterprise in the field of automotive electronic systems headquartered in Beijing. In 2016, the company relocated its production factory to Tianjin and achieved rapid development, capitalizing on the coordinated development of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region. Local authorities in Xiqing actively provides a favorable business environment for the company, offering various supports such as op

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

  •  
IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

IAEA Approves Plan For Water Release - Fukushima

Handout photo shows Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General, together with his team boards a boat one kilometer along the coast of Fukushima Daiichi NPP where 12 meters below the sea surface a tunnel was constructed to use for controlled discharge of the ALPS treated water. Fukushima, Japan. 5 July 2023. UN watchdog has said that Japan's plan to release waste water from the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the sea complies with international standards. The International Atomic Energy Agency says the release will have a "negligible" impact on the environment. The Fukushima facility is running out of storage space for the water, which was used to cool nuclear reactors. Japan's plan has been opposed by China and South Korea. Photo courtesy of IAEA via ABACAPRESS.COM

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Int'l marathon held in tsunami-hit Thai tourist spot

Int'l marathon held in tsunami-hit Thai tourist spot

PHUKET, Thailand - Children join a one-kilometer run in Phuket, Thailand, June 18 as part of the 2006 Phuket International Marathon held to help boost tourism in the southern Thai province hard-hit by a massive tsunami in December 2004.

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Hitachi robot navigates its way to take images

Hitachi robot navigates its way to take images

TOKYO, Japan - Hitachi Ltd. said on March 7 it has developed a robot (in handout photo) that moves indoors negotiating its way around obstacles and uses a surveillance camera to take images. The robot, which measures 57 centimeters high and 50 cm wide and weighs 33 kilograms, is powered by a battery to travel at a speed of one kilometer per hour on two tire wheels. The company said the robot can detect more things as compared with one with a surveillance camera fixed onto one spot.

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Welcome parade for Japanese Emperor and Empress

Welcome parade for Japanese Emperor and Empress

A royal coach carrying British Queen Elizabeth and Japanese Emperor Akihito proceeds in a one-kilometer parade from The Mall to the Buckingham Palace in central London on Wednesday. Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko arrived in London on Tuesday from Lisbon on the second leg of their European tour. They will proceed to Denmark on Sunday. (Pool photo by Kyodo News)

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2 die in explosion at biofuel plant in northern Spain

STORY: 2 die in explosion at biofuel plant in northern Spain DATELINE: May 27, 2022 LENGTH: 00:00:32 LOCATION: Madrid CATEGORY: OTHERS SHOTLIST: 1. various of site of the explosion 2. various of the explosion site (courtesy of the Civil Guard) STORYLINE: Two people died on Thursday in an explosion at a plant making biodiesel on the outskirts of the city of Calahorra in the La Rioja region of northern Spain, local emergency services said. The explosion happened at around 12:55 local time (1155 GMT) and the area was evacuated with a security perimeter set up one kilometer away from the explosion. The two people killed are believed to be workers from a different company other than from the biodiesel plant. No injuries were reported. Some 250 school children from the city of Zaragoza were among those evacuated. They were on a day-trip visiting the nearby Tierra Rapaz nature park. Members of the fire departments from Calahorra and Logrono were at the scene along with members of the local police and Civil

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Tanzanian cartoonist-cum-radio presenter makes electric car

STORY: Tanzanian cartoonist-cum-radio presenter makes electric car DATELINE: April 10, 2022 LENGTH: 00:05:12 LOCATION: DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania CATEGORY: SOCIETY SHOTLIST: 1. Various of Masoud and his co-workers making a car at their workshop 2. Various of a new electric car passing on the street 3. Various of people witnessing the car in a public place 4. SOUNDBITE (English): MASOUD KIPANYA, Cartoonist and designer of the car STORYLINE: Ally Masoud, commonly known as Masoud Kipanya, a 49-year-old Tanzanian cartoonist, radio producer and radio presenter, recently unveiled his locally made electric car in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam. SOUNDBITE (English): MASOUD KIPANYA, Cartoonist and designer of the car "A fossil fuel car when it moves for one kilometer, it produces 21kg of carbon dioxide, a gas car produces 15 kg of carbon dioxide, electric car produces zero, so you can do the math. The future is electric, you know when you look at these other countries developed countries, the UK, they have

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Mt. Aso eruption in southwestern Japan

An official of the Japan Meteorological Agency holds a press conference in Tokyo on Oct. 20, 2021, after Mt. Aso in Kumamoto Prefecture, southwestern Japan, erupted. The eruption occurred at 11:43 a.m. at the No. 1 Nakadake crater, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency. Mt. Aso's volcanic alert level was raised to 3 on a scale of 5, with people urged not to approach the mountain. Volcanic ash has blown more than one kilometer from the crater and reached a height of about 3,500 meters, the agency said.

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Nihon Vital's "Kaisei".

Nihon Vital's "Kaisei".

Taking a hint from the fact that insects find flowers by the wavelength and light intensity of sunlight, the company has developed an "insect eye sensor" that tracks sunlight. It efficiently collects sunlight. The six optical fibers can be extended up to one kilometer and can illuminate 500 square meters. It is about 2 meters long, 2 meters wide and 2.5 meters high. The price starts at 5 million yen (excluding consumption tax). It has been used in buildings and train stations in Kumamoto Prefecture, and its sales have been about 100 million yen. It can also be used to cut infrared rays and ultraviolet rays. The company is currently producing them overseas, but will switch to domestic production within this year. The price will start at 250,000 yen (same as above). "The market for solar concentrators is worth about 20 billion yen. President Yokozawa hopes to capture a 20% share of this market. (Photo taken on December 19, 2019, location unknown, credit: Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun / Kyodo News Images)

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge

Photo taken on January 26, 2021 shows the Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge under construction in Yichang, Hubei province, China. The Wujiagang Yangtze River Bridge, the first of its kind in Yichang with a main span of more than one kilometer, is scheduled to open to traffic on July 1, 2021.

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"Milky Way" appears on river in Osaka

"Milky Way" appears on river in Osaka

Around 40,000 plastic balls, each measuring 8.5 centimeters in diameter and containing blue light-emitting diodes charged by solar power, float for one kilometer on the Okawa River in Osaka, western Japan, on July 7, 2016, imitating the Milky Way to celebrate the annual "Tanabata" Star Festival the same day. Photo was taken with a 23-second exposure. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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New record set for books toppling like dominoes

New record set for books toppling like dominoes

A total of 10,148 books extending for one kilometer topple like dominoes at a complex in Gifu, central Japan, during an event to set a new Guinness World Record on July 12, 2015. A total of 9,862 books fell, breaking the previous record of 5,318 books. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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"Milky Way" appears on river in Osaka

"Milky Way" appears on river in Osaka

Around 40,000 plastic balls, each measuring 8.5 centimeters in diameter and containing blue light-emitting diodes charged by solar power, float for one kilometer on the Okawa River in Osaka, western Japan, on July 7, 2016, imitating the Milky Way to celebrate the annual "Tanabata" Star Festival the same day. Photo was taken with a 56-second exposure. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

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Int'l marathon held in tsunami-hit Thai tourist spot

Int'l marathon held in tsunami-hit Thai tourist spot

PHUKET, Thailand - Children join a one-kilometer run in Phuket, Thailand, June 18 as part of the 2006 Phuket International Marathon held to help boost tourism in the southern Thai province hard-hit by a massive tsunami in December 2004. (Kyodo)

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Hitachi robot navigates its way to take images

Hitachi robot navigates its way to take images

TOKYO, Japan - Hitachi Ltd. said on March 7 it has developed a robot (in handout photo) that moves indoors negotiating its way around obstacles and uses a surveillance camera to take images. The robot, which measures 57 centimeters high and 50 cm wide and weighs 33 kilograms, is powered by a battery to travel at a speed of one kilometer per hour on two tire wheels. The company said the robot can detect more things as compared with one with a surveillance camera fixed onto one spot. (Kyodo)

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Welcome parade for Japanese Empe

Welcome parade for Japanese Empe

A royal coach carrying British Queen Elizabeth and Japanese Emperor Akihito proceeds in a one-kilometer parade from The Mall to the Buckingham Palace in central London on Wednesday. Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko arrived in London on Tuesday from Lisbon on the second leg of their European tour. They will proceed to Denmark on Sunday.

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