Shanghai Daily

Report says Qinghai-Tibet Plateau among cleanest regions on earth

- (Xinhua)

THE Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, which covers over a quarter of China’s land area, is still one of the cleanest regions on earth, according to a white paper issued by the Chinese government yesterday.

With a low intensity of human activity on the plateau, “the air quality is little impacted, the types of pollutants are few and the density is low, and the content of pollutants is similar to those at the North Pole,” said the white paper, titled “Ecological Progress on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.”

Ecological progress on the plateau is essential to the Beautiful China initiative, which aims to create good working and living environmen­ts for Chinese people and play China’s part in ensuring global ecological security.

The Communist Party of China and the Chinese government have made ecological conservati­on a top priority, and believe protecting the plateau is a vital task for China’s survival and developmen­t.

Solid achievemen­ts

A conservati­on and protection system is being developed step by step for the plateau, with solid achievemen­ts in improving ecological conservati­on and environmen­t quality, according to the white paper.

The local green industry has witnessed steady growth, and an eco-culture is taking shape to showcase the plateau’s exemplary role in ecological developmen­t.

Located in southwest China, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau covers the entire Tibet Autonomous Region and Qinghai Province, in addition to parts of Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu and Xinjiang.

It is about 2.6 million square kilometers in area, and most of it lies at an altitude of more than 4,000 meters above sea level.

Hailed as the “roof of the world,” the “third pole” and the “water tower of Asia,” the plateau is a natural habitat for rare animals and a gene pool of plateau life. It is a key eco-safety barrier in China and Asia, and a focus of the country’s drive to promote ecological progress.

China has establishe­d an ecological compensati­on mechanism for the plateau.

From 2008 to 2017, the central government made transfer payments of 16.29 billion yuan (US$2.4 billion) and 8.35 billion yuan to key ecological function zones in Qinghai and Tibet, respective­ly, covering 77 key counties and all areas prohibited to developmen­t by the state, according to the white paper.

China is improving its policies and regulation­s for the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau to form an increasing­ly complete system for ensuring ecological progress.

A system of protected natural areas has been set up in the region, it said.

To date, the plateau has establishe­d 155 nature reserves at all levels (41 state and 64 provincial ones), covering a total area of 822,400 square km. This is equivalent to 31.63 percent of the plateau’s landmass and represents 57.56 percent of China’s land nature reserve areas.

A number of eco-projects have been implemente­d on the plateau, achieving positive results in ecosystem conservati­on, reining in the degradatio­n of the local ecosystem and restoring biodiversi­ty, said the white paper.

The restoratio­n and expansion of rare and endangered species is visible evidence of success in biodiversi­ty conservati­on, it added.

The number of Tibetan antelope on the Qiangtang Plateau in the Tibet Autonomous Region increased from about 60,000 in 2000 to more than 200,000 in 2016. The number of wild yak in this area increased from 6,000 before it was included for protection, to 10,000 in 2016.

The Chinese government has carried out a number of projects for overall improvemen­t of river basins, improvemen­t of urban and rural living conditions, and prevention and control of pollution from factories and mines, according to the white paper.

Zhang Yongze, vice chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, said at a press briefing that more than 94 percent of the region’s rivers are prohibited from exploitati­on and developmen­t.

“Tibet remains one of the areas in the world with best environmen­tal quality,” Zhang said, noting that most areas of the region are in a primordial state.

Tian Jinchen, vice governor of Qinghai, told the same briefing that the province had witnessed an increase in its green coverage, water resources, area of wetland ecosystem, biodiversi­ty and herdsmen’s income over the years, while its desert has been dwindling. The area of Qinghai Lake, China’s largest saltwater lake, has expanded more than 170 square km since 2005, reaching a record size in 40 years. Nearly 1,000 highland lakes and wetlands which disappeare­d in the late 1990s re-emerged in the Sanjiangyu­an area, Tian said.

“The concept of ecological protection is on the mind of every herdsman,” said Drolmayap, a herdsman-turned park ranger for the Sanjiangyu­an National Park, which started trial operation in 2016, to protect the headwaters of the Yangtze, Yellow and Lancang (Mekong) rivers.

Sanjiangyu­an means “the source of three rivers.” The environmen­t had degraded due to human activity such as overgrazin­g but has seen improvemen­t over the past decade with intensifie­d conservati­on and restoratio­n input. “The area has come back to life with blue sky, green grass and clear water,” Drolmayap said. “We frequently see Tibetan antelopes, which used to be rare.”

The white paper pointed out that the unique strengths of local agricultur­e and animal husbandry have become increasing­ly outstandin­g on the plateau.

More than 100 leading enterprise­s have emerged, increasing the incomes of local farmers and herdsmen by 1.18 billion yuan and benefiting 1.75 million people. Tourism has become an important channel for green growth and higher incomes for farmers and herdsmen.

In 2017, Tibet hosted 25.61 million visitors, and its revenues totaled 37.94 billion yuan, representi­ng 28.95 percent of the region’s GDP; Qinghai received 34.84 million visitors, and its revenues totaled 38.15 billion yuan, or 14.44 percent of the province’s GDP, the white paper said.

The white paper, however, noted that the plateau still faces many ecological challenges, including glacier retreat, melting permafrost and other growing disaster risks, due to global warming and contradict­ions between protection and developmen­t.

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