China Daily

Internet spreads growth of urban greening

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At a tree-planting base in Beijing’s Huairou district Peng Minglang was busy pruning branches.

He is one of many who applied online for volunteer work growing and maintainin­g trees at the base.

“In recent years, the internet has popularize­d tree planting in Beijing, enabling people to come and plant trees, learn about plants and donate money for tree planting,” said Li Tao from the Capital Greening Office.

The Huairou base, which covers 50 hectares, was set up in October. It serves as a tool for the public to volunteer for tree-planting services both online and offline.

Cui Shangwu, deputy head of the Huairou Gardening and Greening Bureau, said voluntary tree planting had changed with time. “People nowadays not only plant trees but maintain them in various forms,” he said.

Peng said, “Planting and trimming trees is our way of protecting the environmen­t, and I also find great pleasure in it.”

More than 3,000 residents have participat­ed in activities such as tree planting, maintenanc­e and branch trimming at the base, according to the bureau.

“As a resident, I’m delighted to see Beijing getting greener, and more people are joining in tree planting,” Peng added.

About 210 million trees have been planted in Beijing over the past four decades with the help of local residents, the Capital Greening Office said.

“From 1980 to 2020, the forest coverage in Beijing rose from 12.83 percent to 44.4 percent,” Li said.

“Over the past 40 years, the greening has reached many urban and rural public areas, workplaces and communitie­s. With all this, people living at a rapid pace can be comforted by surroundin­g greenery.”

Li said planting trees in person or getting involved via the internet means taking part in the developmen­t of a greener world and advancing ecological civilizati­on.

There are 25 tree-planting bases in Beijing, the most of any city in the country. Tree-related activities are available all year round, according to the Capital Greening Office.

China launched the voluntary tree-planting campaign in 1981.

Liu Dongsheng, deputy director of the National Forestry and Grassland Administra­tion, said through decades of afforestat­ion, China’s forest coverage has risen from 12 percent in the early 1980s to 23.04 percent today.

Wang Zhongshen, a 71-year-old resident of Beijing’s Xicheng district said: “As a senior citizen, I’m particular­ly interested in singing and walking in parks nearby while appreciati­ng natural views. There is more and more greenery in Beijing, and the environmen­t is constantly improving. I feel very comfortabl­e living in this city.”

 ?? JU HUANZONG / XINHUA XINHUA ?? Medical workers from Dongcheng district plant trees at a park in Beijing in April last year.
JU HUANZONG / XINHUA XINHUA Medical workers from Dongcheng district plant trees at a park in Beijing in April last year.

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