China Daily (Hong Kong)

Biodiversi­ty protection gains traction in legislatur­e

- Contact the writer at houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

As a reporter covering environmen­tal issues, I always have to touch on new topics. There is a long list of issues that I have covered in the past year.

Black and odorous water bodies, sewage outlet management, air pollution and desertific­ation control, national parks, solid waste, garbage classifica­tion, new energy, soil remediatio­n, climate change, and so on.

Among the few topics that I have yet to report on, biodiversi­ty stands out due to my inadequate knowledge of it, despite it once being a short-lived topic at a dinner with a group of environmen­tal reporters from other media outlets.

None of the reporters at the dinner had extensivel­y covered the topic either, due to it being remotely related to people’s daily lives.

However, during this year’s two sessions, I was surprised to hear that Sun Wei, a female deputy to the National People’s Congress from Shaanxi province, plans to make a suggestion to the country’s top legislatur­e about biodiversi­ty protection. In a hurry to go to an appointmen­t, I thought it was just a coincidenc­e to hear people talk about the issue, which I believed was very much like a bench warmer at the basketball court and would fail to get even a little bit of attention.

When I interviewe­d Zhang Tianren, another national legislator and also head of a leading battery manufactur­er for new energy vehicles, my thoughts about biodiversi­ty protection soon showed me to be embarrassi­ngly ill-informed.

I interviewe­d Zhang as I was following up on the disposal of scrapped batteries in China. With China having more new energy vehicles, the country is also seeing an increasing­ly larger pile of discarded batteries.

I had not expected Zhang to make only two suggestion­s on battery recycling — the area he is most familiar with — to the top legislatur­e. However, among four of his motions — a more formal bill based on thorough research and thinking — one is on biodiversi­ty protection.

I failed to ask any questions when Zhang introduced his motion about enacting a special law on biodiversi­ty. Though I felt embarrasse­d, I did gain a lot of knowledge from him.

China ranks third in the world for its number of higher plant species. Though biodiversi­ty is currently included in some laws and regulation­s, Zhang said they lack clauses about how biodiversi­ty should be protected and how to punish violators.

When I asked why he introduced such a motion, a smiling Zhang said it was based on his on-site research and investigat­ion as a national legislator. The knowledge I got from Zhang did save me from embarrassm­ent again when I met the third national legislator planning to make a suggestion about biodiversi­ty, and a national political adviser who came to the two sessions with a proposal to update the list of wildlife species under special State protection. The “bench warmer” in my mind did get attention.

This is my third consecutiv­e year covering the two sessions. Previously, environmen­tal topics that were of interest to national legislator­s and political advisers were mainly those with direct connection­s to people’s lives. They included topics such as air and water pollution, rather than ones like biodiversi­ty.

However, I’ve noticed a difference this year. This can be of great significan­ce as it shows the Chinese people not only caring about their own lives, but also about the ecosystem they are part of. It is also a beginning for me, as I need to learn more about biodiversi­ty. It is definitely on my reporting agenda now.

 ??  ?? Hou Liqiang Reporter’s log
Hou Liqiang Reporter’s log

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