China National Building Material Group FZE

China National Building Material Group FZE China National Building Material Group Corporation (CNBM) was established in 1984 with approval from the State Council.

CNBM FZE is one of the largest building materials and equipment logistics center in the Middle East, which invested by CNBM Group in Jebel Ali Free Zone, Dubai, UAE. As a leader in the Chinese building materials industry, CNBM is the largest comprehensive building materials industry group in China that integrates four major business segments-manufacturing, scientific research, logistics, and tradi

ng. As a Fortune Global 500 company, CNBM has a total asset of over RMB 300 billion, more than 160,000 employees and 17 directly supervised fully-owned or controlled subsidiaries including 6 listed companies and 2 of which are listed overseas. Ranking 319th among the Fortune 500 companies
Ranking 46th among the top 500 Chinese enterprises
Ranking 1st among the top 100 enterprises of the Chinese building materials industry. Our vision:
Initiate new global trading structure; create new value for benefit related partners. Our mission:
To lead the revolution of international trading; be the most influential integrated building materials&service supplier globally.

Xi navigates China-U.S. ties amid global uncertaintyBEIJING, May 11 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese capital will soon become the...
12/05/2026

Xi navigates China-U.S. ties amid global uncertainty

BEIJING, May 11 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese capital will soon become the setting for one of the most closely watched, high-stakes diplomatic encounters of the year, as the leaders of the world's two largest economies prepare to meet face-to-face.

This will be U.S. President Donald Trump's first state visit to China since his re-election, and the second time Chinese President Xi Jinping has hosted him in the country -- their last such meeting in the country took place nearly a decade ago.

Against the backdrop of a complex international landscape and shared global challenges, expectations are running high: How can President Xi and President Trump manage differences between the two sides? How can they navigate the world's most consequential bilateral relationship?

AT THE HELM OF A GIANT SHIP

"You and I are at the helm of China-U.S. relations," Xi told Trump during their latest vis-a-vis talks held in Busan, South Korea, in October 2025. Lasting more than 100 minutes, the meeting marked another moment of direct engagement between the two leaders as they sought to steer China-U.S. relations through uncertainty.

Using a maritime metaphor that has become a recurring theme in his remarks, Xi asked the U.S. president to help keep the "giant ship" of bilateral ties sailing steadily forward.

Over the years, head-of-state diplomacy has anchored China-U.S. relations, serving as a stabilizing force amid shifting global currents. Since Trump's re-election, Xi has spoken with him by phone five times, maintaining close communication on ties and global hotspot issues.

The two presidents first met in 2017, a year marked by an exchange of state visits that set the tone for their interactions. In April that year, Xi and his wife, Peng Liyuan, visited Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate in the U.S. state of Florida, where the two presidents dined together and Xi met Trump's family, including his grandchildren.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, his wife Peng Liyuan, U.S. President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump listen as Trump's grandchildren sing a Chinese folk song and recite classics of Chinese literature in the Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, the United States, April 6, 2017. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang)
It was during that visit that Xi delivered a line often recalled in discussions of bilateral ties: "There are a thousand reasons to make the China-U.S. relationship a success, but not a single reason to break it."

Several months later, in November, Trump traveled to Beijing, where Xi hosted him during a series of special events. The two leaders and their spouses toured the Forbidden City along its central axis, visiting the Hall of Supreme Harmony, the Hall of Central Harmony and the Hall of Preserving Harmony -- an experience imbued with the Chinese cultural ideal of "harmony" reflected in the names of the three grand halls.

Walking inside the ancient royal palace, Xi told Trump that China's history can be traced back more than 5,000 years, or even earlier, and its culture has been passed down in an unbroken continuum.

During a chat over tea on that trip, Trump showed Xi a video of his granddaughter, Arabella Kushner, singing and reciting classical poems in Mandarin. Xi said her performance deserved an A-plus. The clip quickly resonated with Chinese netizens and went viral online.

Chinese President Xi Jinping (3rd R) and his wife Peng Liyuan (1st R), and U.S. President Donald Trump (3rd L) and his wife Melania Trump (1st L) have an informal afternoon tea in the Baoyun Building of the Palace Museum in Beijing, capital of China, Nov. 8, 2017. (Xinhua/Lan Hongguang)
Those early exchanges were widely seen as helping to build a personal rapport between the two leaders, offering a channel to understand each other, manage differences and prevent the relationship from sliding into outright confrontation. "I have a lot of respect for President Xi," Trump has often said.

The past years have seen Xi's meetings with U.S. leaders using this approach -- from the Mar-a-Lago summit and the Yingtai evening talks in the Zhongnanhai compound to the long conversation by China's West Lake -- often remembered as defining moments in bilateral ties.

The upcoming meeting is expected to continue the tradition of high-level engagement. "The real significance of this meeting may not lie in any grand deal," said Denis Simon, a senior fellow at the Quincy Institute. "Instead, it will test whether the United States and China can establish an equilibrium."

Earlier this year, on Feb. 4 -- "Lichun," the traditional Chinese marker for the beginning of spring -- Xi spoke with Trump by phone for the first time in 2026, returning to the metaphor that has come to define his messages on bilateral ties.

"In the year ahead," Xi said, "I look forward to working with you to steer the giant ship of China-U.S. relations through winds and waves, keep it on a steady course, and achieve more major and positive outcomes."

AVOIDING MISCALCULATIONS

In recent years, China-U.S. relations have experienced twists and turns. Some observers fear that China and the United States may repeat the historical pattern of major-power rivalry known as the "Thucydides Trap." Yet, Xi has rejected this notion: "There is no such thing as a 'Thucydides Trap' in the world. But repeated strategic miscalculations between major countries could create one for themselves."

Avoiding such miscalculations, therefore, has become a critical task for China and the United States, which requires both sides to engage in candid dialogue on several key issues.

Foremost is the Taiwan question. President Xi has repeatedly and unequivocally conveyed China's fundamental stance to the U.S. side. In the Feb. 4 phone conversation with Trump, Xi once again stressed that the Taiwan question is the most important and sensitive issue in China-U.S. relations, urging the U.S. side to handle arms sales to Taiwan with utmost prudence.

Trade is another critical issue. In the face of unilateral U.S. tariff offensives, China, under Xi's leadership, has taken resolute countermeasures.

A drone photo taken on May 9, 2026 shows a container ship reaching Qingdao Port in Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province. (Photo by Yu Fangping/Xinhua)
At the same time, Beijing has kept channels of engagement open. Xi has dispatched economic and trade teams that have held six rounds of talks with the U.S. side, seeking to narrow differences step by step while expanding common ground. Currently, trade ties between the two countries remain roughly steady. The two sides will hold a new round of trade talks in South Korea from May 12 to 13.

During their Busan meeting, Xi underscored the broader perspective needed to manage such frictions. "Both sides should take a broader and longer-term view," Xi told Trump, "focusing on the lasting benefits of cooperation instead of falling into a vicious cycle of retaliation." Trump described Xi as a great leader and a firm negotiator.

How, then, does Xi envision the direction of bilateral ties leading into the future? In a speech delivered in San Francisco in 2023, he posed what he described as the number-one question: "Are we adversaries, or partners?"

Chinese President Xi Jinping delivers a speech at Welcome Dinner by Friendly Organizations in the United States, in San Francisco, the United States, Nov. 15, 2023. (Xinhua/Yao Dawei)
"If one sees the other side as a primary competitor, the most consequential geopolitical challenge and a pacing threat," he warned, "it will only lead to misinformed policy making, misguided actions, and unwanted results."

Xi also stressed that China has no intention of challenging or unseating the United States. "China never bets against the United States," he said. "Likewise, the United States should not bet against China."

Drawing on the experience of China-U.S. relations, Xi has outlined three principles -- mutual respect, peaceful coexistence and win-win cooperation -- as the right path forward for the two countries.

China launches robotic cargo mission to space stationBy ZHAO LEI | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-05-11 08:16A Long M...
12/05/2026

China launches robotic cargo mission to space station
By ZHAO LEI | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-05-11 08:16

A Long March 7 rocket carrying cargo spacecraft Tianzhou 10 blasts off from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in South China's Hainan province, May 11, 2026. [Photo/Xinhua]
China launched the Tianzhou 10 robotic cargo mission on Monday morning in Hainan province, sending supplies and propellants to the Tiangong space station.

The cargo vessel's carrier — a 53-meter-tall Long March 7 rocket — lifted off at 8:14 am from a launch service tower at the Wenchang Space Launch Center in Hainan's southeastern coast.

After a short flight, the rocket placed the Tianzhou 10 into its preset low-Earth orbit, and the solar wings on the spacecraft unfolded, marking the successful completion of the launch mission.

As the 20th spaceship and the ninth cargo craft to connect with Tiangong, Tianzhou 10 is carrying nearly 6.2 metric tons of mission necessities, science equipment, and about 700 kilograms of fuel.

The cargo includes a new spacewalk suit, a new treadmill and six sets of experimental instruments, which cover scientific experiments in microgravity and fluid physics as well as new spacecraft technological tests.

According to its designers at the China Academy of Space Technology, the Tianzhou 10 is designed to dock with the Tiangong space station for a whole year, making it the longest cargo mission in China's space industry.

Tianzhou 10's predecessor, the Tianzhou 9, undocked from the Tiangong on May 6 after completing a 295-day flight with the space station. It re-entered the atmosphere the next morning under guidance from ground controllers. Most of the spacecraft disintegrated and burned during re-entry, with a small amount of debris falling into designated areas of the ocean, the China Manned Space Agency said.

Xinhua Headlines: China, Germany agree to deepen partnership, win-win cooperation in Xi-Merz meetingSource: XinhuaEditor...
03/03/2026

Xinhua Headlines: China, Germany agree to deepen partnership, win-win cooperation in Xi-Merz meeting
Source: XinhuaEditor: huaxia2026-02-26

BEIJING, Feb. 25 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping met with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in Beijing on Wednesday, with both sides agreeing to promote the continuous new development of the all-round strategic partnership, promote dialogue and cooperation, and uphold multilateralism and free trade.

This is Merz's first trip to China since taking office. China and Germany are the world's second and third largest economies, and the bilateral relationship not only bears on the interests of both countries, but also has significant impact on Europe and the world.

DEEPENING STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP

The international landscape is undergoing the most profound transformations since the end of World War II, Xi said, adding that the greater changes and turbulence the world faces, the more important it is for the two countries to enhance strategic communication, strengthen strategic mutual trust and work for new progress in China-Germany all-around strategic partnership.

Xi said both countries should be reliable partners that support each other. China and Germany have pursued self-reliance and realized rapid development. Both have upheld mutual respect, mutual trust and open cooperation, and together written a success story of mutual benefit.

China adheres to the path of peaceful development, and has the capacity and confidence to achieve Chinese modernization. China will continue to share development opportunities with Germany and the wider world, he said.

Xi said it is hoped the German side can view China's growth in an objective and rational manner, pursue a positive and pragmatic policy toward China, and work with China for steady and sustained growth of the bilateral relationship.

Merz said that the German side values its relations with China and firmly upholds the one-China policy. It stands ready to work with China to carry forward the traditional friendship, stay committed to mutual respect and open cooperation, and continue to deepen the all-around strategic partnership.

Cui Hongjian, a professor at Academy of Regional and Global Governance at Beijing Foreign Studies University, said it is believed that the meeting between Xi and Merz will contribute to the stable and sustainable development of China-Germany relations, and the development of the strategic relationship between the two countries will also carry significant weight in the development of China-Europe relations.

EXPANDING WIN-WIN COOPERATION

Noting that the two countries should be innovative partners that champion openness and win-win results, Xi said the German government put forward new development strategies in such areas as technology, innovation and digital development. They highly resonate with China's objective of pursuing intelligent, green and integrated development during the 15th Five-Year Plan.

He said the two sides should foster greater synergy between development strategies, support the two-way flow of talent, knowledge and technology, and promote dialogue and cooperation on AI and other cutting-edge technologies.

Both sides need to correctly grasp the interplay of competition and cooperation, explore cooperation pathways that lead to win-win results, and jointly keep industrial and supply chains stable and unimpeded, Xi added.

Merz said the German business community attaches high importance to the Chinese market, and hopes to further deepen cooperation with China for mutual benefit and shared growth.

On the same day, Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Merz attended a symposium of the China-Germany economic advisory committee in Beijing, with both sides expressing the willingness to deepen cooperation in machinery, equipment, and chemical industries.

Jin Ling, an expert at the China Institute of International Studies, said that practical cooperation between China and Germany can not only fully unlock the potential of the Chinese market and stimulate vitality within China's innovation sector, but also support the recovery and transformation of the German economy.

ENHANCING MULTILATERAL COORDINATION

Xi said China and Germany should uphold the central position of the UN, reaffirm its leading role, and take the lead in safeguarding multilateralism, practicing international rule of law, defending free trade, and advocating for solidarity and coordination.

China supports Europe in seeking to increase autonomy and strength, and hopes the European side can work with China toward the same direction, adhere to the positioning of strategic partners, and uphold openness, inclusiveness and win-win cooperation, so as to deliver greater growth in China-Europe relations, and make bigger contributions to world peace and development, he said.

Noting that Germany and China shoulder important responsibilities in jointly addressing global challenges, Merz said the German side looks forward to working with China to enhance coordination, and jointly adhere to free trade and reject protectionism, adding that Germany supports the EU and China in enhancing dialogue and cooperation.

Feng Zhongping, director of the Institute of European Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said that China and Germany share consensus on upholding the central role of the United Nations, and it is believed their close coordination and cooperation in international affairs will inject stability and certainty into a turbulent world.■

Rethinking education reform in AI eraBy Xu Jiuping | China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-02 07:39A visitor interacts with a r...
03/03/2026

Rethinking education reform in AI era
By Xu Jiuping | China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-02 07:39

A visitor interacts with a robot equipped with intelligent dexterous hands at the 2025 World AI Conference in East China's Shanghai, July 29, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
Generative AI is transforming how we work, learn and live, posing fundamental challenges to traditional education. Debates over whether AI will "replace education" reflect deeper questions: how humans and machines should interact, and what the core purpose of education really is. As technology evolves at an unprecedented pace, reform is no longer optional but imperative. By understanding the logic of human-AI collaboration, identifying clear transformation priorities, and building a new talent development system, we can chart a feasible path for modern education and cultivate the skills needed for a tech-driven world.

Clarifying the direction of education begins with two questions: how humans and AI relate, and what education is ultimately for. Humans remain the ultimate architects of AI, not its subordinates. The future is not replacement but collaboration. Education's core value will not vanish; if anything, it must return to its essence — enhancing human reasoning and intellectual growth, using AI to amplify learning while staying true to its fundamental purpose.

The distinction between human and artificial intelligence lies in cognition. AI excels at rapid computation, storing massive datasets and performing tasks within defined rules. Humans, in contrast, possess qualities AI cannot replicate: emotional awareness, moral judgment, and creative imagination. These unique capabilities ensure that AI cannot fully replace human thinking and affirm education's irreplaceable role.

This distinction also underscores education's value. Philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein said, "The limits of my language mean the limits of my world." AI's strength is responding efficiently within established frameworks of knowledge. Yet language — and by extension AI — cannot capture the unknown. Human thought defines the outer boundary of understanding, combining judgment, creativity, and innovation in ways machines cannot. Education's central mission is to nurture these distinctly human faculties.

Recognizing AI's limits is essential for establishing a productive human-AI relationship and guiding education. AI can support learning efficiently but has clear shortcomings: it cannot explore the unknown independently or innovate beyond existing data; it lacks genuine judgment or empathy; and its outputs depend on the quality of its training data, leaving room for error.

Once the human-AI dynamic is clear, the path for education emerges. Breakthroughs in large model technologies, exemplified by Deep-Seek, challenge traditional modes of teaching. Many emphasize mastering AI tools as the priority, but skills alone cannot keep pace with AI's rapid evolution. The focus should shift to cultivating higher-order thinking, strategic vision and adaptive cognitive patterns — skills that enable effective human-AI collaboration. The goal of "integrated development of educational and technological talent" sets clear competencies: understanding AI's principles, boundaries, and applications; articulating needs and leveraging AI for complex problem-solving; and using AI to enhance cognition and create value, supporting technological autonomy.

These competencies reflect a fundamental shift from knowledge transfer to cognitive empowerment. Unlike Industrial Revolution-era machines, which passively executed instructions and required standardized skill training, AI systems learn, iterate and proactively assist in complex tasks. This difference renders traditional skill-focused education inadequate and compels a move toward nurturing adaptive, creative thinkers.

Historical comparison highlights the necessity of this transformation. In the Industrial Revolution, education aimed to "fit humans to machines", emphasizing standard knowledge and industrial skills, evaluated mainly by the mastery of techniques. In the AI era, education must "develop humans", fostering personalized, high-level cognitive abilities and cultivating talent capable of using AI creatively and responsibly. Assessment now balances knowledge, skills and character, emphasizing process and holistic performance.

At its core, education reform is about liberating and developing human potential. AI can efficiently deliver foundational knowledge, but true educational value lies in cultivating higher-order thinking, stimulating innovation, and overcoming cognitive limitations. By doing so, education not only enhances individual intellectual freedom but also strengthens the human-AI relationship and empowers humanity to explore the vast possibilities of the future.

Translating this vision into practice requires a structured framework. The proposed three-dimensional system centers on cognitive empowerment, supported by multidimensional collaboration, and implemented through four-dimensional scenarios. Its aim is to meet the high-quality development demands of the AI era, cultivating talent with adaptive cognition, collaborative abilities and innovative capacity. This framework bridges education, technology and industry, ensuring talent pipelines for technological autonomy and industrial upgrading.

Cognitive empowerment relies on a robust educational ecosystem. Multi-dimensional collaboration focuses on four pillars: teachers, textbooks, curriculum, and assessment. Interdisciplinary teaching teams consolidate expertise; textbooks progress from basic to advanced while integrating AI knowledge; curricula combine required courses, electives and practical training to address foundational and personalized needs; assessments measure knowledge, skills and character, using process tracking and staged evaluation to refine outcomes.

Implementation depends on immersive, real-world scenarios — the "four-dimensional" platform. Virtual simulation labs provide handson AI experiences; school-industry partnerships immerse students in authentic projects; specialized training aligns with real job requirements; and blended online-offline environments enable learners to apply skills in practical contexts, supporting innovation and industry integration.

Ultimately, the goal of education in the AI era is to empower humans, harness AI and cultivate the next generation of thinkers, innovators and leaders capable of navigating a rapidly evolving world. Only by focusing on cognition, creativity, and collaboration can education maintain its unique value and guide humanity toward limitless possibilities.

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at [email protected], and [email protected]

From trash to cash -- tech-driven recycling boosts circular economy in ChinaFrom trash to cash -- tech-driven recycling ...
26/02/2026

From trash to cash -- tech-driven recycling boosts circular economy in China

From trash to cash -- tech-driven recycling boosts circular economy in China
Source: XinhuaEditor: huaxia2026-02-24 09:21:15

People work at Huge Recycle, a company handling household waste recovery and recycling, in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, Jan. 14, 2026. (Xinhua/Jiang Han)
HANGZHOU, Feb. 24 (Xinhua) -- Scanning a code, opening a hatch, and tossing in bottles, Yuan Meirong completes the recycling process in less than 10 seconds. With a ding, 0.8 yuan (11.6 U.S. cents) is credited to her account.

"It's so convenient," said the resident from Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province, gesturing at a smart recycling bin. "Now I can easily recycle delivery boxes and bottles for a little reward. It's fun."

Operated by the internet recycling firm Lovere, the smart bin is one of 870 units deployed across nearly 400 residential communities in Hangzhou's Xihu District since its July 2024 pilot launch.

Residents can enter a phone number or scan a QR code to recycle items such as plastic bottles, cardboard, old clothes, and takeout containers. The bin automatically weighs the items and pays about 0.6 yuan per kg directly to the user's account.

More than a mere convenience, the bins demonstrate how technology is monetizing waste streams across Chinese cities, transforming passive disposal into people's active participation in the circular economy.

Since deploying the smart bins, recyclable-sorting accuracy has reached 98.5 percent, with monthly recycling volume averaging 1,000 tonnes, said Zhang Yixiang, Lovere's Hangzhou chief.

The company has placed over 50,000 bins in 38 cities and has recycled 2 million tonnes for 30 million users.

In Xihu District alone, residents have used the bins 2.58 million times, receiving 4.2 million yuan in total. The top user recycled 9 tonnes, earning 5,400 yuan, according to the company.

Zhang Kang, Lovere's Hangzhou operations head, said the sensors trigger pickups only when bins are full, and an automated sorting center categorizes materials into more than 80 types for sale.

"With scale, the business is expected to become profitable," he said.

The Communist Party of China Central Committee's recommendations for formulating the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) for the country's economic and social development propose promoting a circular economy.

At Xianyu, a leading second-hand trading platform of China's internet giant Alibaba, 7 million used items were listed on average every day in 2025, with daily trading volume up 30 percent year on year.

"Every transaction is users' participation in a green lifestyle," said Ding Jian, the platform's CEO.

From April 2024 to March 2025, Xianyu users reduced carbon emissions by 11.8 million tonnes through trading and recycling -- equivalent to the annual electricity consumption of 7.4 million households, Ding said.

According to the China Association of Circular Economy, the circular economy accounted for about 30 percent of the country's carbon reduction from 2021 to 2025, and this share is expected to rise to 35 percent by 2030.

In Hangzhou's Yuhang District, resident Chai Yuyong praised "Huge," a door-to-door recycling service, which collected his old sofa and table for free in 20 minutes.

Residents place orders via an app, and a worker arrives within an hour to collect, weigh and pay for items such as old appliances.

"Living on a high floor, I found it a hassle to dispose of the bulky old furniture by myself. Now, with just a tap on my phone, they come to collect and carry them for free. It's a real relief," Chai said.

Hu Shaoping, vice president of the company Huge Recycle, said that over the past 10 years, the company has built an end-to-end chain from household collection to sorting, dismantling and resource reuse.

The service offers transparent pricing for used appliances of different sizes. Residents are paid in "green coins," which can be redeemed for cash or spent at Huge's online mall, further driving green consumption. To date, the company has issued nearly 500 million yuan in green coins.

Xu Lin, a professor at Zhejiang University, noted that smart technology has made recycling and green consumption as simple as a phone scan. These small actions, he said, show how the public has moved from being told what to do to taking the lead in the circular economy.

"If the full potential of public participation is unleashed, carbon reduction will become a social consensus and daily habit for everyone," Xu said.

Team China excels on and off the field at 2026 GamesBy Sun Xiaochen in Milan and Chen Xiangfeng in Beijing | China Daily...
26/02/2026

Team China excels on and off the field at 2026 Games
By Sun Xiaochen in Milan and Chen Xiangfeng in Beijing | China Daily | Updated: 2026-02-24

Team China has "achieved excellence" both on and off the field in Milan, Italy, over the past two weeks, said Tong Lixin, deputy head of the Chinese delegation at Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics.

The nation celebrated its best showing at an overseas Winter Olympic Games, winning five gold, four silver and six bronze medals to surpass the previous 5-2-4 record at Vancouver 2010.

The stellar performance drew praise from the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, the country's Cabinet, which sent a congratulatory message to the Chinese delegation on Monday.

"United as one and striving for excellence, you demonstrated tenacity and superb skills, showcasing the positive and uplifting spirit of Chinese sports," the letter read. "You competed fairly, engaged in friendly exchanges and enhanced friendship with athletes from all over the world, once again presenting to the world the strength, spirit and image of China in the new era.

"We hope you will always bear in mind the mission of winning glory for the country and continue to scale new heights."

China had sent 126 athletes to compete across seven sports and 91 events at Milano-Cortina 2026, making the country's largest-ever delegation and most extensive event participation at overseas Winter Games. It had to wait until the second week of the competition for its first gold though.

Su Yiming, the flagbearer of Team China at Sunday's closing ceremony, set off a mini gold rush by winning the men's snowboarding slopestyle on Wednesday. Speed skater Ning Zhongyan then ousted favorite Jordan Stolz of the United States to win the men's 1,500m with a new Olympic record of 1:41.98.

Five-time Olympian Xu Mengtao defended her women's aerials title, before her husband Wang Xindi won the men's event, making them one of the very few married couples to not only claim individual Olympic titles at the same Games, but also do so in the same sport and discipline.

To cap it all, by defending her women's freeski halfpipe crown on the final day, Gu Ailing became the most decorated freeskier in Olympic history, with three golds and three silvers across two Winter Games.

"They successfully accomplished all their competitive tasks, achieving excellence in both athletic performance and sportsmanship, showcasing the flourishing development of China's ice and snow sports," said Tong, the deputy head of the delegation.

However, he noted that while the successes should be celebrated, there is still room for improvement.

"Measured against the task of consolidating China's status as an Olympic powerhouse and the goal of building a strong sporting nation, we are soberly aware that China's overall lag in ice and snow sports globally has not changed, nor has its role as a'chaser'," he said, adding, "The high-intensity competition witnessed at this Winter Olympics calls for further enhancement of our international competitiveness in ice and snow sports." He expressed the hope that the successes in Italy will inspire more young people to get involved in winter sports.

There were also gains in cultural exchanges. Veteran figure skaters Han Cong and Sui Wenjing embraced the opportunity presented by their third and final Olympics appearance to bring to life Chinese arts and culture, skating to drama melody A Tapestry of a Legendary Land and leveraging Song Dynasty painter Wang Ximeng's masterpiece Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains. They transported the crowd at the Milano Ice Skating Arena into a world of ancient Chinese aesthetics that felt both timeless and alive.

"Coming into our third Olympics, one of our main goals, while trying for another medal, was to promote the beauty of Chinese culture," said Sui, who choreographed the program herself. "We'd like to introduce Chinese culture to the world, so that athletes from other cultures can learn about it," said Han.

It seems the competition took note. During her free skate team event, Canadian Madeline Schizas adopted Butterfly Lovers, citing her affection for the Chinese concerto.

"It's a love story — the Chinese Romeo and Juliet," she said. "So often there's a really Western view in the music we skate to. I was excited to bring something different here."

While the Games have concluded, Milan will remain in a celebratory mood, marking the Chinese New Year with its annual Dragon Parade on March 1 at Piazza Sempione in front of the Arco della Pace, where the Olympic flame was extinguished on Sunday.

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