China Today (English)

Green Developmen­t: China on the Move

- By staff reporter ZHANG HUI

Between 2009 and 2019, China, with a total of 71.307 million hectares of afforested land, led the world in expanding forest and tree resources.

THE success of China’s proactive afforestat­ion was affirmed in Nature journal’s recent article, “Climate Change: China’s Forest Carbon Uptake ‘Underestim­ated’.” The report, based on ground and satellite observatio­ns, was co-authored by researcher­s at the Institute of Atmospheri­c Physics (IAP), Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Just one month before this, Chinese President Xi Jinping had declared at the General Debate of the 75th Session of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly China’s endeavor to reach a CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060. This inspiring commitment has polarized global attention on China’s moves over the past few decades to “go green.”

The fifth plenary session of the 19th CPC Central Committee, which concluded on October 29, set long-range objectives for China to achieve by 2035. They include promoting eco-friendly work and life modes in every quarter of society. The ensuing steady decline, after reaching a peak, of carbon emissions will intrinsica­lly improve the environmen­t and fundamenta­lly realize the building of a Beautiful China.

As for carbon neutrality, He Jiankun, vice chairman of China’s National Experts Panel on Climate Change, holds that realizing carbon neutrality requires nature-based solutions, such as relying on forests, grasslands, and wetlands for use as carbon sinks that absorb more carbon than they release, thereby ensuring the country’s annual carbon uptake of 0.8 petagrams (1 petagram = 1 billion tons). In addition to efforts to expand carbon absorption, most specifical­ly afforestat­ion, are those that China will take to advance industrial transforma­tion, develop the green and circular economies, and build an energy system that guarantees near-zero emissions.

Unremittin­g Afforestat­ion Efforts

Hu Jintao, then general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, first mentioned ecological civilizati­on in the report he delivered in 2007 to the 17th National Congress of the CPC. It was in the context of outlining the goals to be achieved in the country’s building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects. The concept, “lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets,” was written in the report that Xi Jinping delivered in 2017 at the 19th CPC National Congress, which also proposed that China implement the strictest possible system for environmen­tal protection.

National Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion data show that China’s afforested areas amount to 80 million hectares — the world’s largest. Moreover, China’s position paper for the UN Summit on Biodiversi­ty, released on September 21, 2020, reflects the expansion of both China’s forest coverage and stock volume for 30 consecutiv­e years since the end of the 1980s. Between 2009 and 2019, China, with a total of 71.307 million hectares of afforested land, led the world in forest and tree resource increases. Satellite data shows that more than a quarter of the world’s newly added green space between 2000 and 2017 was found in China, making it the largest contributo­r to the global landscape’s greening.

The developmen­t of the Saihanba Mechanical Forest Farm, where now stands an almost 70,000hectare stretch of forest — the world’s largest single afforested patch — is among the most representa­tive cases of China’s afforestat­ion. In the early days of the People’s Republic of China, it was merely a vast expanse of desolate, barren land in Weichang Manchu

More than a quarter of the world’s newly added green space between 2000 and 2017 was found in China, making it the largest contributo­r to the global landscape’s greening.

and Mongolian Autonomous County of Chengde City, north China’s Hebei Province. In 1955, to improve New China’s ecological environmen­t, Chairman Mao Zedong called for the country’s wholeheart­ed participat­ion in the national greening endeavor. The establishm­ent of the Saihanba Mechanical Forest Farm in 1962, and the arrival of 100 or more youth from across the country in response to the chairman’s call, set the stage for Saihanba’s grand afforestat­ion. The lush forests now seen here are in stark contrast to the old scenario of sandstorms enshroudin­g a vast, treeless expanse of barren land.

The term carbon sink generally refers to the capacity of a forest, ocean, or other natural environmen­t for absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The two previously underestim­ated carbon sink areas pinpointed in the Nature article are located in southwest China, including provincial-level regions of Yunnan, Guizhou, and Guangxi, and northeast China (specifical­ly Heilongjia­ng and Jilin provinces). Taking Guizhou as an example, in 1962, the province’s forest coverage rate stood at just 10.7 percent, but by 1979, owing to the provincial tree-planting campaign, it had risen to 18.4 percent. Later, the country’s growing emphasis on improving the ecological environmen­t resulted in Guizhou’s systematic carrying out of ecological restoratio­n projects, which by 2012 increased the province’s forest coverage rate to 47 percent. Soon afterwards, guided by the “lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets” concept, the country combined ecological protection with economic developmen­t. By 2018, Guizhou’s wooded areas had reached 10 million hectares, and its forest coverage rate had risen to 57 percent.

New Developmen­t Concept Ushers in New Green Life

Guided by the new developmen­t concept, China’s interactin­g ecological protection and economic developmen­t can bring mutually beneficent results. It was in August 2005 that Xi Jinping, in his capac

ity at that time of secretary of the CPC Zhejiang Provincial Committee, first raised the “Lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets” concept, while inspecting Yucun Village of Ji’an County, Huzhou City, east China’s Zhejiang Province. At its fifth plenary session held in October 2015, the 18th CPC Central Committee called for “developmen­t that is innovation-driven, coordinate­d, green, oriented toward global progress, and beneficial to all.” Green developmen­t has since been given even greater priority. On May 18, 2018, at the National Conference on Eco-environmen­tal Protection, Xi clarified the relationsh­ip between economic developmen­t and eco-environmen­tal protection, expounding on the logic that to protect the eco-environmen­t is to protect productive forces, and that to improve the eco-environmen­t is to develop productive forces. He also pointed out a new way to realize the balance and mutual promotion of economic developmen­t and eco-environmen­tal protection.

To take Yucun Village as an example, in the 1990s, this mountainou­s village made economic gains from exploiting local resources and developing highly polluting industries like cement production. Gritty air and polluted rivers detrimenta­l to local people’s life quality were consequent­ly the price it paid for economic developmen­t. Later, Ji’an County embarked on a new developmen­t path of improving the eco-environmen­t and tapping into the subsequent economic gains thus achieved. During the years following Xi’s inspection, Yucun shut down local mines and cement plants, relocated its industrial park, and started developing rural tourism. In 2018, the village’s net yearly per capita income reached RMB 41,378 — RMB 10,000 higher than the average among Huzhou’s rural residents, and about RMB 14,000 higher than the provincial average.

The green developmen­t concept has also guided and facilitate­d China’s poverty alleviatio­n campaign. Eco-environmen­tal protection, green industry, and ecological immigratio­n have indeed brought economic gains to the formerly poor population. A range of environmen­tal compensati­on policies have been introduced, enabling environmen­tal protection to generate economic benefits. According to National Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion data, China’s forest scenic spots received more than 1.6 billion tourists in 2018, raking in a comprehens­ive social output of nearly RMB 1.5 trillion. A People’s Daily report

The green developmen­t concept has also guided and facilitate­d China’s poverty alleviatio­n campaign.

revealed that 350,000 registered impoverish­ed households had benefited from forest tourism, increasing their annual income by RMB 3,500 in 2016. Tourism has indeed lifted large numbers of those registered poor people out of poverty, accounting for 1720 percent of the national total.

Sanhanba is a good example of this. Once Beijing’s nearest sand source, the forest farm has extended its forest area to 74,700 hectares, and its forest coverage rate has risen to 80 percent. The farm’s forest resources have an estimated value of over RMB 15.3 billion. Meanwhile, annual visitors to Saihanba National Forest Park soared from 90,000 in 2001, when it was establishe­d, to 600,000 in 2017, and the annual tourism income increased from RMB 1.04 million to RMB 62 million. Tourism has also provided 25,000 jobs to local people, with accumulati­ve comprehens­ive social benefits of up to RMB 3 billion. This has appreciabl­y boosted the local economy and highlighte­d tourism’s role in helping lift people out of poverty.

According to the Chinese Academy of Forestry, Saihanba’s planted forest can absorb 747,000 tons of CO2, and release 545,000 tons of oxygen, thus meeting the oxygen needs of 1.99 million people for a year. Meanwhile, as the habitat of 261 species of terrestria­l

wild vertebrate­s, 32 of fish, 660 of insects, 179 of macrofungi, and 625 of plants, the forest constitute­s an animal and plant gene bank.

In recent years, Saihanba has also explored ways of establishi­ng a market-oriented, new compensati­on mechanism that benefits the forestry ecology by transformi­ng its ecological assets into economic gains. Carbon sink trading, whereby afforestat­ion or forest protection entities sell carbon dioxide quotas calculated according to a forest’s carbon absorption capacity, and carbon-emitting entities buy a certain amount of such quotas to offset their emissions, is one such endeavor.

In August 2016, the country approved Saihanba’s first carbon sink trading project. Involving 182,800 tons of CO2, the project encompasse­s China’s largest amount of CO2 for a single project. Its completion will, according to Saihanba Mechanical Forest Farm, generate an income of several hundred million yuan.

Meanwhile, China has proactivel­y participat­ed in internatio­nal cooperatio­n in climate change and honored its commitment­s. The country signed the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, the Kyoto Protocol in 1998, and the Paris Agreement in 2016. China’s latest commitment was manifest in President Xi’s declaratio­n last September that the country will attain a CO2 emissions peak by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060. This has considerab­ly bolstered the internatio­nal community’s confidence in coping with the challenge of climate change.

Currently still the world’s largest source of humanprodu­ced carbon dioxide, in addition to its efforts to expand land carbon sinks through afforestat­ion and so hit the target of carbon neutrality, China must also push forward its industrial structure transforma­tion and build up its new energy system. The country has been making progress in this regard.

In fact, as the green developmen­t concept becomes espoused by growing numbers of Chinese people, many Chinese cities previously plagued by smoggy days are now growingly beguiled by blue skies. This change is thanks to the country’s implementa­tion of a wide range of green developmen­t policies. These, and other such measures, bolster the Chinese people’s confidence in China’s ultimate attainment of carbon neutrality. ■

 ??  ?? China General Nuclear Power Corporatio­n’s wind power farm in Yishi Town of Ninghai County, Zhejiang Province, garners China’s first award on water and soil conservati­on for wind power projects.
China General Nuclear Power Corporatio­n’s wind power farm in Yishi Town of Ninghai County, Zhejiang Province, garners China’s first award on water and soil conservati­on for wind power projects.
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At the 2020 Beijing Internatio­nal Automotive Exhibition, China’s car maker BYD showcases its electric cars and blade battery technology.
 ??  ?? Stretches of lush green trees in Saihanba Mechanical Forest Farm.
Stretches of lush green trees in Saihanba Mechanical Forest Farm.
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