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China Has 65% of Public EV Charging Stations Worldwide

Yes, I guess China supplies free VPN service to all 1.4 billion of their population so they can watch YouTube (as you implied).
Free VPNs all have annoyning ads, I use paid VPN, 3 dollars a month, it works perfectly, fast and ads free. Chinese people use VPNs mostly to watch free contents which we have to pay to watch in China, such as new dramas and movies, they are all free on youtube, you can try to find a Chinese language drama on youtube and they always have hundreds even thousands messages in the comment section in Chinese language.
 
Let me break it down for you so even a 3 year old with down syndrome could understand.

More viewers = more money

1.4 billion potential viewers with potential access to VPN > 13 million potential viewers with potential access to VPN. Even considering the GFW of China, 40+ million oversea Chinese speakers > ~500k oversea Uyghurs speakers

Get it retard? Literally a monkey with brain damage could understand this, or is my expectation of you still too high?

How about I break it down for you jughead since your IQ is unbelievably low.

There are 7.7 billion people on the planet and most of those who are not Chinese have unrestricted access to YouTube without a VPN. At least 1.5 Billion of them understand English.

Don’t you think it would be a better strategy to target those with unrestricted YouTube access than praying for a tiny slice of the 1.4 billion Chinese who have to use VPNs to connect to YouTube…who BTW already have full unrestricted access to Chinese video hosting sites in Chinese so you can cover that market far more easily. Although it is possible most Chinese video hosting sites completely suck and the Chinese population just finds YouTube far better.

I know this may be hard for your pea brain to process but please try it out.

Of course if they are actually targeting overseas Chinese well then that is a different story since you specifically mentioned them targeting the 1.4 billion mainland Chinese to make their money.

But hey there are Chinese people accessing YouTube so the number isn’t zero. It isn’t 1.4 billion though…or even remotely close to it.
 
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It's blocked, not banned, many Chinese use VPN to access youtube to watch new Chinese TV shows, they have to pay to watch them on Chinese websites while on Youtube the shows are free, this is why in comment section you can see hundreds even thousands of Chinese language messages. Vloggers also use VPN to get on Youtube to make more money, they also have multiple channels on different Chinese social media platforms.

This popular teenager Uighur vlogger girl received the Silver Award from Youtube to honor her for building up the number of her followers to over 100,000 in just one year on her Youtube channel, she is so happy for being recognized by overseas social media channels.


But some say this Uighur girl is an ultra Chinese nationalist, she claims that China is the single greatest country in the world and other countries,especially those western countries who attack China are nothing or just pathetic clowns comparing to China, she said we built a massive world class hosptial in 10 days which would easily take the west 5 or 6 years if not more to build, this is like a miracle that only can be done by Aladdin lamp, what those countries who smear China can do? they just envy us and we could just ignore them.
So if many Chinese do like VPN and its acceptable by authorities, then why are they blocking youtube and other foreign websites then? Whats the point, if many chinese are resorting to VPN is access them? Lol
Its actually funny that Chinese have to use american web channels to be able to communicate or have access with users aroubd the world. Its like the CCP has caged Chinese Internet users and they can only use US internet companies sites to communicate out of that wall/cage. In fact even this website we are talking on(PDF) is blocked by CCP in China, so you Chinese onnhere still have to use VPN to communicate with us and the world. Dont you find it pathetic is rediculous on the part of your current ruling party? Their laws are way passed their expiriation date and it just sounds silly now. If anything you are usibg the grâce of american Internet companies to communicate with the world. If tomorrow the US decides to evict and banned Chinese companies/authortities/CCP memebers and offcials, people from using US internet platforms then you will effectively be cut off from communicating and interacting with world's internet community. CCP should at least think about that.
 
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So if many Chinese do like VPN and its acceptable by authorities, then why are they blocking youtube and other foreign websites then? Whats the point, if many chinese are resorting to VPN is access them? Lol
Its actually funny that Chinese have to use american web channels to be able to communicate or have access with users aroubd the world. Its like the CCP has caged Chinese Internet users and they can only use US internet companies sites to communicate out of that wall/cage. In fact even this website we are talking on(PDF) is blocked by CCP in China, so you Chinese onnhere still have to use VPN to communicate with us and the world. Dont you find it pathetic is rediculous on the part of your current ruling party? Their laws are way passed their expiriation date and it just sounds silly now. If anything you are usibg the grâce of american Internet companies to communicate with the world. If tomorrow the US decides to evict and banned Chinese companies/authortities/CCP memebers and offcials, people from using US internet platforms then you will effectively be cut off from communicating and interacting with world's internet community. CCP should at least think about that.
99% foreign sites are not blocked in China, China does block some sties which China believes are anti China or spreading hate or radical ideas. 99% of Chinese don't speak English, so even those sites are not blocked, they still won't communicate with foreigners , those who do speak English use VPN to access some blocked foreign websites.
Internet is indeed control in China, it's a controversial issue and people argue about it on both sides. actually not only China, many countries including US and India , are also talking about regulating the internet.
 
many countries including US and India , are also talking about regulating the internet.

The only regulating they are usually
talking about is limiting the bandwidth to some site in a person’s basement because the local internet companies don’t feel they should be supporting 100’s of GB of downloads for free.
 
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How about I break it down for you jughead since your IQ is unbelievably low.

There are 7.7 billion people on the planet and most of those who are not Chinese have unrestricted access to YouTube without a VPN. At least 1.5 Billion of them understand English.

Don’t you think it would be a better strategy to target those with unrestricted YouTube access than praying for a tiny slice of the 1.4 billion Chinese who have to use VPNs to connect to YouTube…who BTW already have full unrestricted access to Chinese video hosting sites in Chinese so you can cover that market far more easily. Although it is possible most Chinese video hosting sites completely suck and the Chinese population just finds YouTube far better.

I know this may be hard for your pea brain to process but please try it out.

Of course if they are actually targeting overseas Chinese well then that is a different story since you specifically mentioned them targeting the 1.4 billion mainland Chinese to make their money.

But hey there are Chinese people accessing YouTube so the number isn’t zero. It isn’t 1.4 billion though…or even remotely close to it.
Every time I thought you hit the bottom ceiling of stupidity, you breach it. Of the 7 billion people on this planet, majority don't speak English and she likely doesn't either. Are you seriously asking why she's not making videos in a language foreign to her you dumb shit? She's making videos for Chinese audiences (oversea Chinese + those in mainland China with YouTube access), which exponentially outnumbers Uyghur speakers when it comes to potential view count.

You do realize there are more Chinese speakers than English speakers right? Did you fall from the retarded tree as a child and hit every branch on the way down?
 

China’s Guangdong province has more EV chargers than entire US

October 22 2022

GUANGZHOU – Range anxiety is a thing of the past for electric vehicle (EV) owners in the Chinese province of Guangdong.

The coastal region, which borders Hong Kong, has built hundreds of thousands of public charging points – the EV equivalent of petrol pumps – over the past few years.

With 345,126 public chargers and 19,116 charging stations as at the end of September, Guangdong has the largest EV charging network in China, one that has more than doubled from a year ago, according to the China Electric Vehicle Charging Infrastructure Promotion Alliance. This is around three times as many public chargers as in the whole of the United States, according to BloombergNEF data.

In a push to electrify their nations’ car fleets, governments around the world are trying to roll out and scale their public charging infrastructure swiftly enough to service new battery-powered cars. President Joe Biden’s infrastructure law devotes US$5 billion (S$7 billion) to building a nationwide network of EV charging ports along major travel corridors in the US, while Germany has spent or pledged US$6.4 billion to support the charging industry.

But both the US and Europe have fallen well behind China in building up their networks. A BloombergNEF analysis counted 112,900 public chargers deployed across the US and 442,000 in Europe by the end of 2021, compared with 1.15 million in China.

This gap is only growing. In just the past 12 months, China added 592,000 public chargers – more than the total number the Biden administration wants by 2030. The Chinese government plans to build enough charging stations for 20 million EVs by 2025, according to a January document by the National Development and Reform Commission and nine other ministries.

These charging pylons are installed by third-party utility operators, state-owned electric companies – the two biggest of which are State Grid Corp of China and China Southern Power Grid – and EV makers like Tesla and China’s Nio and Xpeng.

Tesla operates more than 8,700 supercharger stalls across 370 cities in China – roughly a quarter of its global supercharger network.

China’s efforts to forge a green infrastructure are paying off. Domestic demand for cleaner cars now dramatically dwarfs that of Europe and the US. A quarter of all new cars purchased in China are new-energy vehicles, and such sales are forecast to hit a record six million this year.

In Guangdong, ubiquitous charging is also boosting electric car ownership. EV sales jumped 151 per cent in the first half of the year, according to the Guangdong Bureau of Statistics. The province now has more than 1.4 million EVs, the highest share in the country, according to the national monitoring and management platform for new-energy vehicles.

“With more chargers, there is less range anxiety. EV sales therefore go up,” said Mr David Zhang, an automotive analyst who is also dean of the Jiangxi New Energy Technology Institute. “Having so many chargers is definitely a breakthrough, but we have to remember that charging still takes a lot longer than refilling the petrol tank. That is now the real obstacle.”

Guangdong’s provincial government is also doubling down on EV manufacturing. One in eight electric cars sold in China is now made in Guangdong. From January to July, local EV production jumped more than twofold from a year before. Strong production capabilities can have a spillover effect, improving customer experience and aftersales service and even lowering pricing within the province, said Mr Zhang.

Ms Yoyo Gu, a 40-year-old housewife from Guangdong, traded in her Dongfeng Citroen C4 internal-combustion sedan for a GAC AION V Plus electric sport utility vehicle earlier this year as part of a provincial subsidy programme to bolster EV adoption.

“I got around 8,000 yuan (S$1,560) off the bill,” said Ms Gu. This is on top of the EV purchase tax exemption, which the government has extended until the end of 2023.

For the first few months, she recharged her SUV overnight at public charging stations in her neighbourhood, before finally installing a private charging outlet in the carpark of her residential complex.

“When my friends talk about buying an electric car, no one worries about charging any more,” said Ms Gu. “The carpark below our apartment added five new chargers in the past couple of months and we can easily find one on the road.” BLOOMBERG

 
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