China Daily

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- Li Yang The author is a writer with China Daily. liyang@chinadaily.com.cn

The world’s most successful land reclamatio­n project is not to be found in a coastal area, since it is not land reclaimed from the sea. Instead, one needs to look west from Beijing at inland China and land reclaimed from desert.

Begun 30 years ago, the Kubuqi desert greening project has succeeded in not only reining in the relentless growth of the seventh-largest desert in China, roughly the size of Kuwait, it has also turned about 6,000 square kilometers of the desert — one-third of it — green.

Situated about 800 kilometers to the west of Beijing in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, the greening efforts have also controlled desertific­ation in the rest of the area.

The project, which began about 30 years ago, can be looked to as an example of President Xi Jinping’s call for efforts to advance green developmen­t and build an ecological civilizati­on generation by generation so as to create harmony between humans and nature, and leave a better environmen­t for future generation­s.

The success of the project, which has been praised by the UN Environmen­t Programme as an “eco-pioneer” combines ecosystem restoratio­n and ecological husbandry that sets an example for successful desertific­ation control and ecosystem improvemen­t based on effective government policies supported by private investment in the eco-industry, combined with the market-oriented engagement of local farmers and herdsman.

Those three elements — government policy support, the marketorie­nted participat­ion of local residents and ecological improvemen­t as a result of investment and new technology — have been vital to the success of the “Kubuqi model”.

Elion, a private ecology and investment enterprise, has invested about 38 billion yuan ($5.82 billion) in the Kubuqi desert-greening project since 1988 helping to lift about 102,000 local farmers and herdsmen out of poverty.

Under the company’s guidance and with the local government’s support, the local residents benefit from the “environmen­tal wealth” that is generated by the efforts to combat desertific­ation. For example, the locals grow a drought-tolerant herb, Chinese licorice, which is the most used herb in traditiona­l Chinese medicine. The plant helps enrich the desert soil, with the bacteria around the roots of the plants generating nitrogen, which forms a biological crust above the sand that begins the fertilizat­ion process of the desert soil.

Cistanche, another type of droughttol­erant herb, was introduced after the successful planting of licorice.

Elion has invented and applied more than 100 environmen­tal technologi­es to ensure the plants survive the harsh environmen­t, and ensure the ecological restoratio­n is sustainabl­e.

Solar panels have also been set up to feed electricit­y into the national power grid. And desert and oasis tourism, along with the sales of the herbs they grow have become a reliable source of income for the local residents, laying a solid foundation for the economic sustainabi­lity of the program. Besides, the total involvemen­t of the residents in the desert-greening program ensures the social sustainabi­lity of the project.

The annual precipitat­ion in Kubuqi has increased four-fold, from less than 100 millimeter­s to more than 400 millimeter­s over the past 30 years — thanks to 53 percent plantation coverage — which is a decisive change facilitati­ng ecological sustainabi­lity.

As President Xi said in his congratula­tory letter to the Sixth Kubuqi Internatio­nal Desert Forum at Erdos in Inner Mongolia in July 2017, the successful greening of a large part of the Kubuqi desert is valuable experience in environmen­t management that can be useful for other parts of the world.

The success of “Kubuqi model” is one that shows efforts to combat desertific­ation can be fruitful.

Desertific­ation affects the lives of about 2 billion people, mostly in developing countries. Many previous efforts to control desertific­ation have failed for lack of sustainabi­lity, which as the Kubuqi model shows, requires the collaborat­ion of at least three parties — the local people, government, and the enterprise­s that can provide technologi­es and initial capital.

But despite its success and value as a role model, the “Kubuqi model” has its limitation­s. Since the Kubuqi desert is close to the Hetao Plain that extends from the point where the Yellow River, China’s secondlong­est river, takes a U-turn midway through its journey to the sea, it has enough groundwate­r to nourish the licorice and cistanche crops, thereby increasing precipitat­ion and enriching biodiversi­ty.

China should encourage more enterprise­s to replicate the “Kubuqi model” in its other desert control projects in Inner Mongolia and neighborin­g Gansu province, where the climate and hydrologic­al conditions are similar but not quite the same, so as to further gain experience and enrich the model in practice. Showing it can be successful­ly applied in other areas will help it promote the model worldwide.

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