China Daily (Hong Kong)

Tibet standing firm on conservati­on

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

Tibet will not sacrifice ecological conservati­on for developmen­t despite the region setting its economic growth target at 11 percent this year, one of the highest among all provincial regions in China, a senior local official said on Friday.

“We know how important Tibet’s ecological conservati­on is to China and the world,” said Lobsang Jamcan, director of the Tibet Regional People’s Congress Standing Committee, the local legislatur­e.

“Tibet has establishe­d ecological red lines to guard against overdevelo­pment and no one can cross them,” he said at a panel discussion during the ongoing session of the national legislatur­e in Beijing.

With an average altitude of about 4,000 meters, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in Southwest China is a unique geographic­al region. It is the source of many major rivers of China, South Asia and Southeast Asia, home to important species and biological diversity, an adjuster of climate change and a great provider of ecological security.

Lobsang Jamcan said the regional government has not approved a single mining project since 2012. “It doesn’t matter how profitable the project is, we will turn it down as long as it threatens Tibet’s environmen­t.”

The region plans to build more railways and highways to improve connectivi­ty to boost its trade with South Asian countries as a part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, according to the regional government.

Lobsang Jamcan said balancing the relationsh­ip between developmen­t and ecological conservati­on is quite a challenge for the regional government because more than one third of Tibet’s territory comprises State-level natural reserves. The region is also home to the Tibetan Antelope and Yak National Park, China’s first large-animal conservanc­y.

Yonten, director of the regional government’s forestry department, said, “Although constructi­ng detours will incur extra cost and create more difficulti­es, no transporta­tion infrastruc­ture is permitted to be built within the current core areas in the natural reserves.”

Tibetan antelopes, wild yaks, Tibetan wild donkeys, black-necked cranes and other endangered species have experience­d notable growth in numbers in recent years, Yonten said.

The population of Tibetan antelopes has risen to more than 200,000 from 50,000 in 1995. The number of blacknecke­d cranes, which were once nearly extinct, has also risen to about 7,000, according to the regional forestry department.

The wildlife population increased despite a tourism boom in Tibet, dispelling concerns that rapid tourism growth could threaten the region’s fragile environmen­t, Yonten added. Last year, tourism in Tibet grew steadily, with annual arrivals rising by 15 percent to more than 23 million.

Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

 ?? KUANG LINHUA / CHINA DAILY ?? NPC deputies Pema Choidron (center), Phuntsog (at right) and Yontan (at left) prepare their speeches before the start of a panel discussion with the Tibet delegation on Thursday.
KUANG LINHUA / CHINA DAILY NPC deputies Pema Choidron (center), Phuntsog (at right) and Yontan (at left) prepare their speeches before the start of a panel discussion with the Tibet delegation on Thursday.

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