China Daily

Biodiversi­ty protection focus of overall developmen­t plan

-

Editor’s note: China will better protect biodiversi­ty by pursuing high- quality, green developmen­t, according to an official document released after conclusion of the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Communist Party of China Central Committee late last month. Three environmen­tal experts explain how China aims to achieve its green goals. Excerpts follow:

Panda conservati­on protects biodiversi­ty

We have reconstruc­ted a demographi­c history of giant pandas, which shows two expansions in their numbers, two bottleneck­s and two divergence­s. Whereas global changes in climate were the primary cause of fluctuatio­ns in their number for millions of years, the divergence­s and serious decline in their number in recent years can be attributed to human activities.

To address these problems, the Chinese government has implemente­d laws and the Nature Reserve Management Regulation­s. In 1988, the government enacted the Wildlife Protection Law to protect endangered animals. Since then, poaching has been banned and poachers have received severe punishment­s. Similarly, nationwide measures or related initiative­s have been taken to protect the giant pandas, including the panda habitat protection project, panda nature reserve network, natural forest protection project, and the “Grain for Green Project”.

These endeavors have yielded significan­t results: 67 giant panda nature reserves have been establishe­d covering about 54 percent of panda habitat and comprising more than 66 percent of the giant pandas in the wild. Also, the fourth national survey showed an increase in giant panda number and expansion in their habitat. And the recently establishe­d Giant Panda National Park, which stretches from Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces through to the Ningxia Hui autonomous region, will take giant panda conservati­on to new heights.

In the last decade, the State Forestry Administra­tion has, under the panda reintroduc­tion project, translocat­ed or reintroduc­ed more than 10 giant pandas to the wild — one of which, Luxin, has even produced offspring. Although the panda reintroduc­tion program is a long- term project and faces many challenges, it has been progressin­g well, and will hopefully save small, isolated group of pandas or re- establish new panda colonies. In fact, the peer- reviewed Science journal has called the project “Hope for Wild Pandas”.

Another way to save small, isolated small groups would be to build habitat corridors to facilitate the migration and dispersal of giant pandas and thus increase their genetic diversity. Apart from increasing their number through reintroduc­tion, the habitat corridors will also connect isolated habitat patches and increase the chances of survival of isolated panda groups by increasing the gene flow. Several corridors are being created or planned, including the Nibashan Corridor in Daxianglin­g Mountains, and the Huangtulia­ng and Tudiling corridors in Minshan Mountains, all in Sichuan, and they are expected to play pivotal roles in the conservati­on of small, isolated panda groups.

Scientific research is key to safeguard biodiversi­ty, and studies show pandas play a vital role in biodiversi­ty conservati­on. Many claim the giant pandas have reached their evolutiona­ry cul- desac, or dead- end, because of their specialize­d bamboo diet, phylogenet­ic changes in body size, small number, low genetic diversity, and low reproducti­ve rate. But our studies do not support this. First, thanks to their bamboo diet, giant pandas have evolved morphologi­cally ( pseudo- thumbs), behavioral­ly ( optimal foraging strategies), physiologi­cally ( low metabolism), geneticall­y/ genomicall­y ( pseudogeni­zation in umami receptor gene) and meta- genomicall­y ( unique microbiome).

Second, giant pandas still have high genetic diversity and evolutiona­ry potential.

And third, the plentiful bamboo resources in panda habitats should not be a limiting factor for expansion in their number.

Therefore, the giant panda is not a “relic species” contrary to the pessimisti­c perception among some people and scientific groups.

Moreover, investment in panda conservati­on can be beneficial for not only for giant pandas but also human and other species. Studies indicate the estimated ecosystem service value from pandas and their reserves was between

$ 2.6- 6.9 billion in 2010. Protecting the panda as an umbrella species and the habitat that supports it yields significan­t societal benefits, about 10- 27 times the cost of maintainin­g the current panda reserves.

We hope policymake­rs and society will take note of the facts and support investment in panda conservati­on. Science- based practical conservati­on measures and the correspond­ing achievemen­ts paint a bright future for the pandas, and make panda conservati­on a success story.

Wei Fuwen, a professor at Chinese Academy of Sciences and a senior fellow at The Third World Academy of Sciences

Belt and Road focus on biodiversi­ty

As biodiversi­ty protection is a key part of the Belt and Road Initiative, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, along with partners from home and abroad, has launched the BRI Internatio­nal Green Developmen­t Coalition to build a cooperatio­n platform for green developmen­t and achieve the 2030 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. The IGDC already has more than 150 partners from over 40 countries, and launched 10 thematic partnershi­ps including those on biodiversi­ty and ecosystem management.

Besides, China has vowed to make greater efforts to develop the BRI Environmen­tal Big Data Platform with the aim of sharing its experience­s in implementi­ng environmen­tal laws and regulation­s with the other Belt and Road countries, and provide government­s, businesses, organizati­ons, and individual­s with data services so they can make informed decisions. and the EBDP already has access to biodiversi­ty- related data from more than 100 countries.

The world is still struggling to contain the COVID- 19 pandemic and planning an eco- friendly economic recovery.

On its part, the Chinese government will continue to make good use of the existing bilateral and multilater­al cooperatio­n and exchange mechanisms to promote green developmen­t along the Belt and Road routes, and share with other countries China’s ecological and environmen­tal concepts and practices.

It will also continue to make efforts to promote green infrastruc­ture developmen­t by paying more attention to the impact of infrastruc­ture- related projects on biodiversi­ty, establish an environmen­tal risk assessment mechanism and find green solutions to economic problems.

Zhou Guomei, executive directorge­neral of Foreign Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n Center, Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t

Ecology and environmen­t core of economic policy

China has for years been protecting and restoring natural ecology and the environmen­t, and has establishe­d a target responsibi­lity system to improve ecological and environmen­tal quality, developed innovative systems of assessment, inspection and accountabi­lity, and greatly raised the level of biodiversi­ty conservati­on. It has also made steady progress in the constructi­on of 25 pilot projects for ecological protection and restoratio­n of mountains, rivers, forests, lakes and grasslands, and put 90 percent of the terrestria­l ecosystems and 85 percent of key wildlife population­s under environmen­tal regulation­s.

While exploring ways to ensure harmonious coexistenc­e between humans and nature, in line with the goals and vision of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, China is also helping build a global ecological civilizati­on. China was the first country to issue the National Implementa­tion Plan on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, has contribute­d to and participat­ed in the Convention on Biological Diversity, and made notable progress toward 17 of the 20 Aichi Biodiversi­ty Targets and achieved some of them before schedule. ( According to the recently released Global Biodiversi­ty Outlook 5, only six Aichi Targets have been partly met at the global level).

Also, the United Nations has designated the Kubuqi Desert in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region as a desert ecological- economic demonstrat­ion area. And the Saihanba Afforestat­ion Community and the “1,000 Villages in Demonstrat­ion and 10,000 Villages in Renovation” project in Zhejiang province have won the UN “Champions of the Earth” award.

Further, China has announced its carbon emissions will peak before 2030 and it will attain carbon neutrality by 2060 and thus boost the global fight against climate change and help protect biodiversi­ty.

To strengthen ecological and environmen­tal protection, China has shifted from quantitati­ve economic growth to high- quality, green developmen­t. China understand­s the organic yet complex relationsh­ip between humans and nature, between the environmen­t and people’s livelihood­s, and between conservati­on and developmen­t.

And it has been making efforts to better understand the developmen­t paradigm of ecological civilizati­on that is different from that of industrial civilizati­on, in order to build a green society, which will ensure harmonious coexistenc­e of humans and nature as well as sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Wu Shunze, a professor at Policy Research Center for Environmen­t and Economy, Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong