China Daily

Project to aid ecology of wetland

Countering pollution, improving water quality in Baiyangdia­n a high priority

- By ZHANG YU in Anxin county, Hebei zhangyu1@chinadaily.com.cn

Baiyangdia­n, northern China’s largest freshwater wetland, will see its ecological environmen­t further improve as part of the Xiongan New Area, according to local authoritie­s.

“The water quality will get better,” said Liu Dongchen, administra­tive head of the Baiyangdia­n Wetland Nature Reserve. “The new area will certainly enhance the wetland’s ecological conservati­on.”

The wetland is mainly in Anxin, one of three counties included in the new area in Hebei province.

The new area, the third national special economic zone after Shenzhen Special Economic Zone and Shanghai Pudong New Area, is of national significan­ce and “crucial for the millennium to come”, according to the central government.

Since it is home to Baiyangdia­n, the new area is ecological­ly healthy, He Lifeng, minister of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said after China announced on April 1 that it would set up the new area.

He made the remarks while explaining the reasons for choosing the location.

The ecological protection of Baiyangdia­n was listed as a priority task by President Xi Jinping during an inspection tour of Anxin on Feb 23.

With 143 lakes and covering 366 square kilometers, Baiyangdia­n has been dubbed the “kidney” of the North China Plain. It has many ecological functions, such as maintainin­g balance, regulating climate and conserving water, according to the administra­tion.

However, Baiyangdia­n’s water quality and ecosystem have declined since the 1980s due to periods of drought and discharges of industrial wastewater, household waste and sewage — as well as villagers’ destructiv­e behaviors, such as breeding fish and removing reeds from the water.

In recent years, a series of ecological restoratio­n measures were undertaken to improve the situation.

More than 25 polluting factories around Baiyangdia­n have been closed, and 68 companies have installed environmen­tal protection facilities.

Villages near the reserve have been equipped with sewage and waste treatment equipment to ensure that no more waste is pumped in and that sewage is treated before flowing into the wetland.

Zhang Guozeng, a 64-year-old fisherman from Xiaozhangz­huang village next to Baiyangdia­n, said it is harder now than in the past to catch wild fish.

“The water quality is better, and there are no net cages for breeding fish in the water anymore,” he said.

He has been catching fish in Baiyangdia­n for years and hopes the Xiongan New Area will bring more good changes.

“I miss my childhood when villagers could drink water directly from Baiyangdia­n,” Zhang said.

According to the NDRC, a plan on pollution control and ecological conservati­on of Baiyangdia­n was among the first plans to be drafted for the new area’s developmen­t.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong