China Daily

Xiamen’s restoratio­n of ailing lake sets an example for world

- By LI MENGHAN in Fuzhou limenghan@chinadaily.com.cn

Lake restoratio­n in Xiamen, Fujian province, can offer guidance in the coordinati­on of high-quality developmen­t and high-level protection of the marine environmen­t, officials and experts said.

High-level protection is a crucial pillar for high-quality developmen­t, and the comprehens­ive restoratio­n of Yundang Lake in Xiamen has prioritize­d ecological preservati­on and low-carbon developmen­t, Minister of Natural Resources Wang Guanghua said at a recent conference in Xiamen.

Yundang Lake, once a bustling natural harbor, was turned into a lagoon in the 1970s because of land reclamatio­n and embankment constructi­on, reducing its water area from 10 square kilometers to only 1.6 sq km.

In the early 1980s, intensifie­d constructi­on projects and a surging population exerted mounting environmen­tal pressure on the lake, resulting in turbid water and unpleasant odors. More than 100 factories directly discharged wastewater into the lake.

A turning point came in 1988, when the city proposed strengthen­ing legal protection, ceasing pollution, dredging and reconstruc­ting the banks, revitalizi­ng the water body, and enhancing the surroundin­g environmen­t.

Xiamen’s progress in restoratio­n efforts has seen the city dubbed “a garden above the sea”, and it has gradually establishe­d a comprehens­ive management and technologi­cal support system for the marine environmen­t.

High-level protection has also resulted in high-quality developmen­t. Thirty-six years of ecological efforts in Xiamen have yielded substantia­l scientific achievemen­ts in various fields, such as the high-tech marine industry and marine carbon sequestrat­ion.

Xihu Lake in Fuzhou, Fujian’s capital, took the lead in the wider adoption of Xiamen’s comprehens­ive restoratio­n approach to safeguard water quality, biodiversi­ty and people’s well-being.

The area around the lake, one of Fuzhou’s eight major historical and cultural scenic attraction­s, is the city’s oldest and best-preserved ancient garden.

However, industrial­ization and urbanizati­on in the 1980s presented the lake with a challenge akin to that faced by Yundang Lake.

Wu Ying, who lives near the lake, said that in her childhood, the water would occasional­ly become foul in the summer. But after years of restoratio­n, it is now “the most visited location in Fuzhou”.

Fuzhou has been practicing water management since the 1990s, and the shift from labor-intensive methods to the use of mechanical equipment enhanced the effectiven­ess of restoratio­n efforts. However, the focus at that time was on dredging rather than tackling the root cause of the pollution — the escalating discharge of wastewater from surroundin­g factories and residentia­l areas.

The pollution issue in the lake was not addressed until later that decade, when the city proposed a comprehens­ive approach incorporat­ing dredging, ceasing pollution, water diversion and management.

Similar to Xiamen, Fuzhou has linked the lake to the sea, transformi­ng stagnant water into a dynamic ecosystem and fostering a healthier aquatic environmen­t.

To consolidat­e the overall management of the water system, Xihu Lake introduced a water quality display screen in 2020 that shows realtime data on five key water parameters. It has enhanced public oversight and participat­ion in water management, said Hu Ming, director of the city’s urban water system coordinati­on center.

After years of restoratio­n, the lake’s overall water quality has improved from the lowest level to the third-highest in a five-tier system, and water transparen­cy has nearly doubled to 0.7 meters, said

Wu Xiande, mayor of Fuzhou.

Zhang Wu, deputy head of the city’s natural resources and planning bureau, said people now make more than 10 million trips to the lake a year, with tourism revenue reaching 5 million yuan ($690,000).

Many cities outside Fujian, such as Wenzhou in Zhejiang province, Beijing, and Fangchengg­ang in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region that are also promoting highqualit­y developmen­t in tandem with environmen­tal protection, vowed at the conference to incorporat­e ecological restoratio­n in their urban developmen­t planning.

The ecological rehabilita­tion of Yundang Lake was showcased as a prime example of China’s ecological restoratio­n efforts during a meeting of parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity in 2021, and Xiamen’s approach has been extended to more than 100 developing countries.

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