The Press

‘Panda park’ plan secures billions in funding

-

A huge ‘‘panda park’’ aimed at boosting numbers of the long-endangered species and bringing tourism to remote parts of China has moved a step closer to becoming reality after it secured 9.6 billion yuan (NZ$2b) worth of funding.

The Giant Panda National Park will be developed across a vast mountainou­s area covering 26,000 square kilometres – about twice the size of Yorkshire, and three times the size of Yellowston­e National Park in the United States. It will establish ‘‘migration corridors’’ to link the current 67 panda reserves on six isolated mountain ranges across an area spanning three provinces.

China has long faced problems increasing the number of pandas due to inbreeding among small sub-population­s, which sometimes number fewer than 10 members. Such small groups are vulnerable to disease and are less able to adapt to changing environmen­ts.

The new park would allow the bears to ‘‘mate with pandas from other areas, enrich their gene pool and raise their numbers in the wild’’, state media said, after the

CHINA:

idea was first approved by Beijing last year.

Details of a Y10b, five-year funding package from a stateowned bank were unveiled this week.

The announceme­nt came as the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s rubber-stamp parliament, meets in Beijing. Delegates are expected this weekend to confirm proposals to scrap time limits on presidenti­al terms, a move which has caused concern in some quarters that Xi Jinping, the current leader, intends to rule for life.

The return of strongman rule in China might increase the importance to Beijing of soft power – including the long-held diplomatic tool of gifting other nations pandas. But so-called ‘‘panda diplomacy’’ has been met with challenges, given the notoriousl­y low reproducti­ve rate of the animals.

The park will be located in largely undevelope­d areas of three neighbouri­ng provinces: Sichuan, Gansu and Shaanxi. Sichuan is home to 80 per cent of the world’s wild pandas, while the remainder live in the other two provinces.

There are currently just over

2000 giant pandas, experts say, double the 1995 number, and an increase from around 1600 in 2003.

In the wild, there are 1864 pandas, 17 per cent more than a decade ago, according to the most recent national survey, in February 2015. China wants to raise the wild population to more than 2000 by 2025.

The species came off the ‘‘endangered’’ list in 2016, but is still classified as ‘‘vulnerable’’.

The new park is also being seen as a means of helping hundreds of thousands of local people out of poverty. However, state media said that while some local communitie­s might be able to improve their standard of living through employment in tourism, as many as

170,000 people would have to be relocated. – Telegraph Group

 ??  ?? China wants to raise the wild population of giant pandas to more than 2000 by 2025.
China wants to raise the wild population of giant pandas to more than 2000 by 2025.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand