User talk:Prabalsubedi

Alcohol Consumption in Nepal, China ang Germany
A homework for the USC in Jacobs University Bremen

1. What do students drink here on campus ? Students here in campus drink a lot of alcoholic drinks. Some of these are. Beer- Becks Lemon, Becks Gold, Oettinger, Paulaner Weizenbier

Wine- Red Wine (merlot), White Wine (chardonnay),

Whisky-Johny Walker Red Label Whisky, Johny Walker Black label whisky Vodka- Vodka and Red Bull, Smirnoff Vodka , Finlandia Vodka, absolute vodka And Miscelleaneous- Brandy, Rum, Gin, Heineken,Paulaner, Tequila, Prosecco, Bombay Sapphire Gin,, Tequila, Absinthe, Sake (Japenese Drink), Cognac, Martini, Mojito.. ( courtesy- from survey using method of spamming the jacobs-students)

2. What do Bremen people drink and what those from Shanghai? Bremen people specially drink Beck’s Beer. However, they also drink all above given drinks.(Germans love drinking!) Shanghai people drink mostly beer(Tsingtao, Shanghai Imported beer) and drinks from China(white liquors, yellow wines, yellow wines, fruit wines, Medicinal liquor

3. What is the alcohol consumption in your home country, Germany and China (check at the                                                                                                WHO website for such type of questions) Alochol Consumption according to WHO- 2001 A.D.''' China 4.5 litres/(person*year) Germany 13litres/(person*year) Nepal  0.075 litres/(person*year)

The values for China and Nepal are low because

China Estimated by the experts as there are also home made alcohols. The actual alcohol consumption might be more by 1 litre a year per person (experts)

Nepal In most parts of the country, liquor is freely available and unlicensed home-brewing accounts for the major production of alcohol. In fact, the Liquor Control Act of Nepal allows the production of homemade forms ofalcohol for domestic use, although much home-made alcohol is diverted to the market. Such activity takes place mostly in rural settings, but also occurs in urban areas.

References http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/en/china.pdf http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/en/germany.pdf http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/publications/en/nepal.pdf