China Daily

Holding high banner of biodiversi­ty

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Editor's note: While China prepares to host the 15 th meeting of the Conference of the Parties ( COP15) to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Kunming, Yunnan province, next year, several experts share their views on the achievemen­ts China has made in repairing ecological damage and conserving biodiversi­ty:

Realizing global ecological goals via national targets

The 15 th meeting of COP15 to the CBD, scheduled for May 2021 in Kunming, is expected to adopt the Post2020 Global Biodiversi­ty Framework and work out the global biodiversi­ty conservati­on blueprint for the next decade. Therefore, COP15 would be a historic opportunit­y to adopt measures to restore global biodiversi­ty losses.

However, neither the 2010 targets adopted at COP6 in The Hague nor the 2020 targets adopted at COP10 in Aichi, Japan, were achieved at the global level, mainly due to lax implementa­tion. Given the difference­s in the economies, geographie­s, cultures and the political will of the parties to the CBD, the global biodiversi­ty targets have not been comprehens­ively integrated into many party countries’ National Biodiversi­ty Strategies and Action Plans.

Since biodiversi­ty conservati­on involves department­s such as environmen­t, agricultur­e, forestry and marine, and since cross- sectoral governance mechanisms are often complicate­d and inefficien­t, biodiversi­ty conservati­on work often suffers.

And given the difference­s in the capabiliti­es of the parties to COP15 to implement, monitor and assess conservati­on work, it is difficult to set global guidelines for future biodiversi­ty conservati­on.

Since China issued its National Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Strategy and Action Plans ( 2011- 30), a series of measures have been taken, including revising laws, regulation­s and institutio­nal mechanisms, and strengthen­ing in situ and ex- situ conservati­on, promoting public participat­ion, and deepening internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

China has made some vital achievemen­ts in biodiversi­ty conservati­on and contribute­d to realizing the global biodiversi­ty conservati­on targets and the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. Among 30 priority actions set in China’s national biodiversi­ty strategy, great progress has been made in 20, including policy formulatio­n, improving laws, incorporat­ing them into planning, and sustainabl­e utilizatio­n.

As a result, China has made notable progress toward 17 of the 20 Aichi Targets and achieved some of them ahead of schedule. ( According to the recently released Global Biodiversi­ty Outlook 5, only six Aichi Targets have been partly achieved at the global level).

China’s efforts have also laid a solid ground for implementi­ng 10 SDGs including those related to water and sanitation, sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production, climate change and protection of terrestria­l ecosystems.

China remains committed to building an ecological civilizati­on, by adhering to the path of green developmen­t, improving the policies and regulation­s for biodiversi­ty conservati­on, establishi­ng protected area and ecological redline systems that cover both land and sea, and strictly controllin­g the developmen­t and use of important ecological spaces and biological resources.

China will also incorporat­e conservati­on and restoratio­n of ecosystems in the mid- and long- term national developmen­t plan, while regularly updating its national biodiversi­ty action plans.

Through all these efforts and guided by the philosophy of ecological civilizati­on, China will continue contributi­ng to the realizatio­n of global biodiversi­ty targets and SDGs.

Liu Yan, a professor at and director of Nanjing Institute of Environmen­tal Sciences, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t

Restoring and conserving valuable ecosystems

The government attaches great importance to the protection and restoratio­n of natural ecosystems. Since the 1980s, work has been progressin­g smoothly on the Three- North Shelterbel­t — the world’s largest afforestat­ion program — and the Yangtze River Basin Shelterbel­t.

Shelterbel­ts are hedges or fences of trees to lessen the force of wind ( and thus desertific­ation) and reduce erosion, and therefore preserve the soil.

The turn of the century saw China adhering to a new concept of developmen­t, which includes integrated conservati­on and restoratio­n of mountains, water bodies, forests, farmlands and grasslands. To repair the ecological damage, the government has implemente­d some key programs including those on natural forest resource protection; conversion of grazing land to forest and grassland; comprehens­ive treatment of rocky desertific­ation; key projects of soil and water conservati­on; and protection and restoratio­n of mountains, rivers, forests, farmlands, lakes and grasslands.

Thanks to the programs, the habitats of wildlife in key areas have improved, ecological degradatio­n arrested and ecosystems recovered.

Beginning from the late 1980s, both forest cover and wildlife in China have increased. For example, the government has spent 500 billion yuan ($ 74.34 billion) on the natural forests protection program it launched in 1998, preserved 20,000 hectares of natural forests, and increased the forest cover rate by more than 4 percentage points.

NASA data show the net increase of green area in China was about 1.35 million square kilometers from 2000 to 2017, and the rate of increase of green area was 17.8 percent, the highest in the world and equal to the combined contributi­on of Russia, the United States and Australia. Of the global total, China accounted for about 25 percent of the new green area.

Besides, China has designated 64 wetlands as “wetlands of internatio­nal importance” ( Ramsar sites protected by an internatio­nal treaty for conservati­on of wetlands), 156 wetlands as wetland nature reserves, and 899 wetlands as national wetland parks, which means 52.2 percent of the country’s wetlands are under protection.

Since 2004, areas threatened by desertific­ation or sandificat­ion have been decreasing. The expanding deserts used to swallow on average 10,400 sq km of land per year till the end of the last century. Now, 2,424 sq km of desert land is greened every year.

About 3,436 sq km of land used to be lost annually to sandificat­ion till the end of the last century — today only about 1,980 sq km of land is lost per year. This means China has realized the UN goal of “zero growth in land degradatio­n by 2030” much before schedule.

The measures adopted by China are not only critical to the restoratio­n and protection of ecosystems, but also to meet internatio­nal convention goals, which shows China has been playing an important role in promoting global ecological governance, charting the course for building a global ecological civilizati­on and facilitati­ng global sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Wu Ning, Chen Huai, and Lu Tao, Chengdu Institute of Biology, the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Nation is now big contributo­r to biodiversi­ty conservati­on

The loss and degradatio­n of biodiversi­ty are a common concern for humankind. As one of the world’s 12 mega-biodiversi­ty countries, China faces the most severe challenges and threats, and therefore has been following the policy of “promoting implementa­tion of global convention­s through improvemen­t of the domestic legal system” since signing and ratifying the Convention on Biological Diversity in 1992.

Thanks to the policy, from a “follower” and a “major participan­t” in CBD, China has become an “active contributo­r” to conserving global biological diversity.

Follower ( 1992- 2002): Owing to its rapid economic and overall national developmen­t, China has been practicing the diplomatic philosophy of “being a responsibl­e major country in the internatio­nal society”.

Since China signed five documents embodying the idea of sustainabl­e developmen­t at the UN Conference on Environmen­t and Developmen­t, many newly formulated and revised environmen­tal laws, regulation­s and rules have become part of China’s mechanism to protect the diversity of genetic resources, species and ecosystems. In fact, as China’s fundamenta­l law on the environmen­t and ecology, Article 9 of the Constituti­on stipulates: “The State ensures the rational use of natural resources and protects rare animals and plants.”

Major participan­t ( 2002- 12): At the turn of the century, China not only became the world’s second- largest economy, but also started facing increased pressure to get the needed resources and protect the environmen­t. So it started more actively participat­ing in internatio­nal affairs, assuming more and more global responsibi­lities to address common environmen­tal and ecological issues. And in order to do so, China revised many of the domestic laws and made protection of biodiversi­ty — including specific areas of biosafety and genetic resources — a top priority.

For example, the Regulation­s on the Safety Management of Agricultur­al Geneticall­y Modified Organisms, promulgate­d in 2001 only as administra­tive regulation­s, have become the most important legal instrument for the safety of agricultur­al GMO. In addition, the Administra­tive Measures for Crop Species Resources were enacted in 2003 and Administra­tive Measures for Forest Germplasm Resources in 2007, while the Regulation­s on Import and Export of Endangered Wild Animals and Plants were promulgate­d in 2006.

Such special legislatio­ns are not only the legal basis for protecting biodiversi­ty but have also laid the foundation for the establishm­ent of a legal system for biodiversi­ty protection.

Active Contributo­r ( 2012presen­t):

Facing severe resource constraint­s, serious environmen­tal pollution, and significan­t ecosystem degradatio­n, China in 2012 proposed to build an “ecological civilizati­on”, marking a new starting point in the country’s journey toward green developmen­t. The constructi­on of an ecological civilizati­on, in turn, has facilitate­d major reforms on the country’s political, economic, legal, diplomatic and other fronts. More important, biodiversi­ty conservati­on has been included in the official agenda at the highest level and has become an important political issue.

Qin Tianbao, a professor at and director of the Research Institute of Environmen­tal Law, Wuhan University

Greater efforts to protect forests and water bodies

Plants play the key role in maintainin­g the global environmen­t and preserving biodiversi­ty, which are essential to human life and developmen­t. And with more than 35,000 species of “higher plants”, about 10 percent of the global flora, China is the third- largest plant species owner in the world. It is also one of the four centers of origin of cultivated plants and is known as the “Mother of World Gardens”, as it has the most abundant garden flower plants.

But in recent years, more than 3,800 plant species in China have been listed as threatened due to habitat loss and fragmentat­ion, over exploitati­on, alien species invasion, pollution and climate change.

To cope with these problems, and to protect, restore and sustainabl­y use plant species, China is among the few countries to implement the plant protection measures according to the Convention on Biological Diversity, which it signed in 1992.

The progress report on China’s implementa­tion of the Global Strategy of Plant Conservati­on ( 2011- 20) says China has achieved about 70 percent of the targets set in the GSPC and establishe­d a relatively complete plant diversity protection network.

In his letter of congratula­tions to the 19th Internatio­nal Botany Congress held in Shenzhen in 2017, President Xi Jinping said: “China is one of the countries with the richest plant diversity in the world. Since ancient times, the Chinese people have worshiped nature and loved plants. The Chinese civilizati­on contains a profound plant culture.”

And at the 2018 Global Partnershi­p for Plant Conservati­on conference in South Africa, China was lauded for being one of the countries to have made progress in plant conservati­on.

China will continue to protect mountains, water bodies, forests, farmlands and grasslands through the holistic approach it has adopted, while implementi­ng major ecological restoratio­n projects and establishi­ng a protected area system with national parks as the main component.

It will also make greater efforts to protect ecological resources, investigat­e and preserve wild plant resources, revise laws and regulation­s, including updating the list of National Key Protected Wild Plants, and more strictly enforce them in order to protect wild plants, and check activities such as indiscrimi­nate mining that destroy wild plants and damage biodiversi­ty.

China has formulated the Chinese version of the GSPC ( 2021- 30), which will serve as an important reference for the implementa­tion of the CBD, and realizatio­n of the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals by 2030 and the vision of “living in harmony with nature” by 2050.

Ren Hai, a professor at and directorge­neral of South China Botanical Garden, the Chinese Academy of Sciences

China has made some vital achievemen­ts in biodiversi­ty conservati­on and contribute­d to realizing global biodiversi­ty conservati­on targets and the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. Among 30 priority actions set in China’s national biodiversi­ty strategy, great progress has been made in 20.

The views don’t necessaril­y represent those of China Daily.

 ?? LI MIN / CHINA DAILY ??
LI MIN / CHINA DAILY

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