Business Day

China’s popular culture sows a forest of problems and pests

• Greening programme no simple task

- Agency Staff

Few environmen­tal campaigns in China have been so enthusiast­ically pursued or so controvers­ial as the Great Green Wall.

Every spring, government officials, teachers, students and company employees go on group tree-planting trips. State media single out forest workers for praise. Film stars line up to be “tree-planting ambassador­s”. It is a campaign in the vein of the old Communist propaganda drives — the workers uniting to dominate the forces of nature. March 12 is National TreePlanti­ng Day.

Launched in 1978 to protect the north, northwest and northeast, three regions affected by sandstorms sweeping out of the Gobi Desert, the so-called Three-North Shelter Forest Programme aimed to grow 35-million hectares of new trees a forest the size of Germany — across the country’s north by 2050.

In the ensuing four decades, planting trees became one of both the private and public sectors’ favourite climate change solutions.

The programme was beset by problems from the start because of poor planning, the unrealisti­c demands of local party cadres, and a poor understand­ing of where a forest can successful­ly grow.

We were told of the importance of planting trees at a very young age,” says Sun Jing, director of the Alashan Foundation, a Chinese charity that combats desertific­ation. The idea that more trees equals good is never challenged.”

While the mission was designed to take 72 years, local officials wanted results quickly, so most of the trees planted were fast-growing poplars that could withstand the region’s

cold, dry winters. By the 1990s huge numbers of them started dying, victims of the Asian longhorn beetle, which loves softwoods, including poplars. The more China planted, the more longhorn numbers exploded.

One of those who witnessed the disaster was Zhang Jianlong, who holds a degree from Inner Mongolia Forestry College. “We didn ’ t expect so many trees to die,” Zhang said in an interview with Hong Kong Phoenix TV in 2016, when he headed the Chinese Forestry Bureau. Having only a single species attracts pests and diseases.”

Officials cut down millions of infected trees, some of which ended up being turned into packing crates for China’s burgeoning internatio­nal trade. (This allowed the beetle larvae to hitch rides to Europe and North America, where government­s are now spending

a fortune trying to control infestatio­ns.) Meanwhile, planting went on — sometimes using varied species, but often not. Sometimes twice as many trees were planted as the land could sustain, based on the understand­ing that 50% might die.

Forest coverage has officially increased since 1978, from 12% to almost 22%. Nasa satellite images confirm that China is a world leader for afforestat­ion.

VARIED SPECIES

Planting monocultur­es on a degraded area may be better than doing nothing, but it would certainly be much better to plant a mixture,” says Bernhard Schmid, professor of environmen­tal sciences at the University of Zurich and Peking University. “The more species there are, the more it increases ecosystem functions.”

A paper Schmid co-authored

in Science in 2018 found that a monocultur­e could store an average of 12 tonnes of carbon a hectare, while a biodiverse forest can hold 32 tonnes on the same size plot. Other research suggests that China may be overestima­ting how much carbon its trees are absorbing, because the estimates are based on the number of trees planted, not the number that remain. Worse still, planting non-native trees in dry regions — where most of China’s forestatio­n efforts are unfolding — not only leads to a poor survival rate but

can also worsen water scarcity and damage ecosystems.

China has had more success with a plan to add trees and green spaces to its rapidly constructe­d cities. Since 2004, about 170 cities have launched forest city” campaigns designed to green urban areas and curb pollution. Each city has added an average of 13,000ha of parks or woods a year. In the new town of Xiong’an, for instance, 130km southwest of Beijing, a programme called the Millennium Forest endorsed by President Xi Jinping mixes more than 100 types of trees. This autumn, 3,600ha of saplings will be added. The plan is to cover 40% of China’s urban land with trees and green spaces in seven out of 10 cities by the end of the decade.

Even here, though, things have not always gone according to plan.

In the central city of

Chongqing, former local Communist Party chief Bo Xilai began a huge tree-planting campaign that included lining streets with fully grown ginkgo trees, his favourite species. In 2010 the city spent $1.5bn planting trees, draining its coffers and borrowing from neighbouri­ng provinces before Bo was removed during a politicall­y motivated anticorrup­tion sweep in 2012.

More recent evidence suggests that China has learnt from past failure. The second phase of the newer BeijingTia­njin Sandstorm Source Control Project calls for 85% of the dedicated land to be given over to “natural forestatio­n”, an approach that cordons off degraded land and allows vegetation to grow back naturally. Critics have questioned, however, whether such an approach can succeed in areas where much of the topsoil has already blown away or nutrients are poor.

Officials have also recognised the importance of involving local communitie­s. Many former tree-planting projects failed because of neglect. The Alashan Foundation set up a programme that pays farmers to plant 100-million haloxylons in Alxa in Inner Mongolia. The small, hardy desert trees grow on degraded land owned by the farmers, who can then harvest a parasitic plant called herba cistanche that grows on the trees and is used in traditiona­l Chinese medicine. The farmers are paid for growing the trees after three years, if at least 65% survive.

ECONOMIC BENEFIT

If you talk to the farmers about climate change, they don’t understand it. But if the project brings economic benefit and also makes their environmen­t better, then it’s much easier to get them on board,” Alashan ’ s Sun says. “There are the criticisms, but from my experience living in Alxa and talking to local villagers, the environmen­t is getting better, so planting trees is better than just letting the land be deserted.”

Despite all the setbacks, China regards its forestatio­n effort as a success, one of the nature-based solutions” that have become popular in government rhetoric. But the country ’ s long and expensive planting programme does show that building a forest is a complex and subtle task. It varies with local conditions, and it must provide economic and social benefits for those who will have to look after the trees.

In the meantime, Beijing has said it plans to export treeplanti­ng programmes to other countries under the belt and road initiative, which includes more than 130 nations.

According to the government-affiliated China Green Foundation, three “green economic belts” will be created by 2030 that link China with countries in Central and West Asia, including Iran, Kazakhstan, Pakistan and Turkey. The tree of choice for the programme: the poplar.

WE DIDN’T EXPECT SO MANY TREES TO DIE. HAVING ONLY A SINGLE SPECIES ATTRACTS PESTS AND DISEASES

 ??  ?? Green glitches: While China’s reforestat­ion programme has been enthusiast­ically supported and hailed as a success, poor planning has resulted in the wrong types of trees being planted and too much monocultur­e. / 123RF/Igor Goncharenk­o
Green glitches: While China’s reforestat­ion programme has been enthusiast­ically supported and hailed as a success, poor planning has resulted in the wrong types of trees being planted and too much monocultur­e. / 123RF/Igor Goncharenk­o

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