In China, anything can be "woven," even seaweed.
Currently, the world's largest production line for textile and apparel seaweed fiber has just gone into operation,
with a capacity to establish a "sea cotton warehouse" that can produce up to 5,000 tons.
Discarded clothing, scraps, and plastic bottles can all be turned into "silk" after recycling.
The polyester fibers extracted from 8 discarded plastic bottles can be woven into a men's T-shirt. The power of textiles is also present in the nation's grand projects.
During the construction of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge's underwater tunnel,
it was necessary to hoist approximately 6,000 tons of reinforced concrete joints into the seabed at a depth of 28 meters,
and the hoisting belts used were anti-creep industrial fibers; resin-based carbon fiber materials, which are lightweight and strong,
were used in the body of the C919 large aircraft.