With more advanced awareness of environmental protection, the United States,
Japan and European countries have formed standard waste paper recycling
systems," said Zhang Yin, explaining the geographical advantages of the ACN.
"Paper-making can't do without environmental protection," said Zhang. "That's
the motto of the Nine Dragons Paper, which puts an average of two to three
percent of each project's investment into preventing pollution and monitors its
waste water discharges 24 hours a day."
Nine Dragons Paper was set up in Guangdong in 1995, when the Chinese market
was dominated by imported wrapping paper.
"Foresight is the key," said Zhang. "While most domestic producers were using
machines with a production capacity of less than 50,000 tons, our first machine
had a capacity of 200,000 tons. We have higher goals."
Zhang's vision paid off after 10 years of efforts. By the end of 2005, the
Nine Dragons had become China's largest container board maker and one of the
world's largest in terms of production capacity, according to a report by the
Resource Information Systems Inc., a major information body for the paper and
timber industry.
In March, Nine Dragons went public in Hong Kong, with its share price jumping
nearly 40 percent on the first trading day.
A half year later, the funds raised in the stock market had reduced the
company's debt-capital ratio from 187 percent to 33 percent, and added as much
as 24 billion yuan to Zhang's fortune, making her the wealthiest self-made woman
in the world.
"My sister hates lazy people the most. She is always energetic and more
diligent than any other person I know," says Zhang Yin's sister Zhang Xiubo. "We
obey her unconditionally."
Five of Zhang's sisters and brothers as well as her husband help in the
business, but Zhang denies kinship plays a key part in her management.
"Out of the whole family, only one brother has entered the company's
management. I chose him for his ability," she said. "My husband used to be a
doctor, but I discovered his talent and convinced him to do business. They have
proved to do an excellent job."
A mother of two, she believes balancing career and family is the key to the
success of a businesswoman.
Her achievements could encourage China's promotion of a resource-efficient
society and a sustainable economy with 10 million tons of scrap paper yet to be
recycled each year.
However, those who want to become next Zhang Yin are challenged by the
country's lack of a professional paper recycling system, with most of it buried
or burned without being sorted from other garbage.
Li Jianhua, a national legislator, proposed to the National People's Congress
in March that China should make laws to improve its waste paper recycling system
by establishing special recycling agencies and enacting unified standards for
sorting waste paper.
"The recycling of paper is the way to solve the raw materials shortage that
is the bottleneck of China's paper-making industry, and a requirement for
building a resource-efficient society," said Li.
Until then, Zhang Yin is likely to retain her crown as the "queen of waste
paper."
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