China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Dynamic monitoring mechanism’ planned

- By CHEN ZIMO

In the outline developmen­t plan for the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, unveiled on Feb 18, authoritie­s set out a framework for “building ecological protection barriers”.

“We will strengthen the protection and control of coastlines, strengthen the protection of coastal resources and the maintenanc­e of their natural attributes, and establish and improve a dynamic monitoring mechanism for coastlines,” the plan states.

Even before the outline had been released, Shenzhen, Guangdong province, had taken steps to protect its remaining natural shorelines. Now, work is underway to redevelop and upgrade its artificial shorelines.

The new rules demand that the natural coastline of the Chinese mainland within the Bay Area should stretch at least 105 kilometers by next year, according to Shenzhen’s 13th Five-Year Plan related to urban constructi­on and land use.

The plan also aims to renovate 45 km of artificial coastline, turning it into coastal leisure zones or public parks.

The coastline of the Pearl River Delta has been redesigned since the reform and opening-up policy was inaugurate­d in 1978.

From 1973 to 2017, about 758 square kilometers of land was reclaimed from the sea in the Bay Area. The area across Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Hong Kong and Guangzhou alone reached a combined 575 sq km, accounting for more than 75 percent of the total.

Before reform and openingup, only about 10 percent of the shoreline that now makes up the Bay Area was artificial coastline, and most of it was in Hong Kong. By 2016, 65.5 percent of the Bay Area shoreline was artificial.

However, the 34.5 percent of natural coastline that remains is already below the 35 percent bottom line as specified in a national decree called Measures for the Protection and Utilizatio­n of Coastlines. The document, intended to help maintain the natural shoreline, was issued by the State Oceanic Administra­tion in 2017.

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