China aims to build its own Yellowstone on Tibetan plateau

CHRISTINA LARSON and EMILY WANG Associated Press XINING, China (AP) — There's a building boom on the Tibetan plateau, one of the world's last remote places. Mountains long crowned by garlands of fluttering prayer flags — a traditional landscape blessing — are newly topped with sprawling steel power lines. At night, the illuminated signs of Sinopec gas stations cast a red glow over newly built highways. Ringed by the world's tallest mountain ranges, the region long known as "the rooftop of the world" is now in the crosshairs of China's latest modernization push, marked by multiplying skyscrapers and expanding high-speed rail lines. But this time, there's a difference: The Chinese government also wants to set limits on the region's growth in order to design its own version of one
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