China Daily

Kubuqi Desert forum shares experience­s in reclaiming the land

- By LI YOU liyou@chinadaily.com.cn

The sixth Kubuqi Internatio­nal Desert Forum shared China’s experience in tackling desertific­ation for the past 30 years, reiteratin­g the importance of natural laws and green economic developmen­t.

The forum was held in the Kubuqi Desert in North China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region on July 29. The Kubuqi Desert is China’s seventh-largest sand area, measuring 18,600 square kilometers.

The desert is one of the birthplace­s of the sandstorms that can strike Beijing.

The straight distance from Beijing to Kubuqi is around 800 km, making it the nearest desert to Beijing.

The local people there modified their overall plan to combat desertific­ation under the guidance of a systematic scientific and technologi­cal outlook. Now, the word “desert” has been redefined by desertific­ation fighters.

Elion Resources Group, a green technology and finance company, has been part of the Kubuqi desertific­ation-control project since 1988.

At the forum, the company shared its expertise in reclaiming land in desert regions by planting the Chinese herb licorice.

Licorice plants are drought tolerant and can grow on uncultivat­ed land, making it a pioneer plant for optimizing desert soil properties.

The legume bacteria living around licorice plants’ roots have a nitrogen fixation effect, increasing the soil’s fertility.

One licorice plant can help to reclaim 0.1 square meter of desert.

In most circumstan­ces, the plant grows upright toward the sky.

Elion innovated the planting method, making one licorice tree become capable of reclaiming 1 sq m of the land, 10 times more than before.

Besides planting licorice, the company also works together with local residents with the support of new technologi­es. The company has succeeded in reclaiming over 6,000 sq km of desert, mostly by planting desert-friendly plants.

Starting as a small company mining a salt field, Elion has invented more than 100 environmen­tal technologi­es, as well as more than 100 technologi­cal solutions to improve the desert environmen­t.

To date, Elion has invested more than 38 billion yuan ($5.82 billion) in improving the enrionvmen­tal conditions in the desert.

The company’s input has generated more than 500 billion yuan in environmen­tal wealth. The whole project pulled 102,000 local farmers out of poverty.

“Only if we respect nature and observe its laws, can we transform the issue of desertific­ation into opportunit­y. Thereafter, we can turn the fiscal burden caused by deserts into green GDP,” said Wang Wenbiao, chairman of the company.

Thanks to the efforts made by local people, in today’s Kubuqi, people can see flocks of sheep and cattle grazing under the solar panels; the panels feeding electricit­y into the national power grid; and the boundless, starry sky above the darkened desert, which attracts more and more visitors.

With the theme the Green Belt and Road Initiative, Sharing Desert Economy, the sixth forum is a practical response to the proposal that “green mountains and clear water are as good as mountains of gold and silver”.

The replicable and practical experience represents a stimulatin­g approach contribute­d by China to the global desertific­ation control effort.

A senior Chinese official said in a congratula­tory letter to the forum that China has always attached great importance to combating desertific­ation and has made remarkable achievemen­ts. Kubuqi is a good example of China’s success in containing desertific­ation and China offers its experience to the internatio­nal community, the official added.

The letter also noted that since its founding 10 years ago, the forum has become an important platform for nations to exchange their experience in combating desertific­ation and achieving the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertific­ation — a binding internatio­nal agreement on land issues — agreed that the land reclamatio­n project in the Kubuqi Desert has set a good model for the rest of the world, creating a new way under the framework of marketizat­ion, industrial­ization and shared public benefits.

The road explored by Kubuqi locals aims to be a balanced solution to drive the sustainabl­e developmen­t of sand-control, ecology, livelihood and economy.

The forum was sponsored by China’s Ministry of Science and Technology, the State Forestry Administra­tion, the Inner Mongolia People’s Government, the United Nations Environmen­t Programme and the Secretaria­t of the UN Convention to Combat Desertific­ation.

China has about 2.6 million sq km of desert and another 1.7 million sq km of desertifie­d land, which together is about a tenth of the world’s total.

Thanks to the authoritie­s’ efforts, desert and desertifie­d areas in China have on average been reduced by about 4,000 sq km annually in recent years.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Capitalizi­ng solar and thermal energies in the Kubuqi Desert, Elion develops an ecological photovolta­ic industry. It integrates desertific­ation control, power generation, plantation­s, animal husbandry and poverty alleviatio­n.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Capitalizi­ng solar and thermal energies in the Kubuqi Desert, Elion develops an ecological photovolta­ic industry. It integrates desertific­ation control, power generation, plantation­s, animal husbandry and poverty alleviatio­n.

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