China Daily Global Weekly

Ant Forest wins top UN green award

Initiative is part of China’s overall contributi­ons to protect environmen­t

- By KONG WENZHENG in New York nancykong@chinadaily­usa.com

Ant Forest, a Chinese green initiative, has won the United Nations’ highest environmen­tal honor. Picked for the 2019 Champions of the Earth award on Sept 26 in the Inspiratio­n and Action category, Ant Forest is motivating half a billion people to protect the environmen­t by turning their green deeds into an afforestat­ion campaign, the award says.

“It’s very innovative,” said UN Environmen­t Programme Executive Director Inger Andersen.

“It’s big. It has managed to mobilize millions of people to get an understand­ing of the environmen­t and what they can do by contributi­ng a small amount of resources,” she said.

Launched by Ant Financial Service Group, an affiliate of the Chinese internet giant Alibaba, Ant Forest promotes greener lifestyles by inspiring users to reduce carbon emissions in their daily routines and better protect the environmen­t.

Users are encouraged to record their low-carbon footprint through daily actions, such as taking public transporta­tion or paying utility bills online. For each move, they receive “green energy” points.

When they accumulate a certain number of points, an actual tree is planted. Users can view images of their trees in real time via satellite.

“Ant Forest reflects our belief that technology can and should be harnessed for social good,” said Eric Jing, chairman and chief executive officer of Ant Financial.

The UN’s Andersen said: “What we like is to have people connected with the environmen­t.

“We live more and more in urban settings. We see less and less of the environmen­t and what our own action is doing to the environmen­t. So having people engaged in a personal way is very powerful.”

Xu Di, general manager of the Ant Forest initiative, said: “Efforts to go green should not be limited to responses to appeals from the UN or government­s and scientists, but rather something that engages everyone in a bottom-up approach.

“Only in this way can we see an inclusive green world coming,” said Xu, who accepted the award along with Shen Junliang, who represente­d users of the app.

Since its launch in August 2016, Ant Forest and its non-government­al organizati­on partners have planted around 122 million trees in some of China’s driest areas, including in arid regions in Inner Mongolia, Gansu, Qinghai and Shanxi.

The trees cover an area of 112,000 hectares, making the project China’s largest private-sector tree-planting initiative.

Ant Financial’s Jing said that due to the rising popularity of the program, the company might need to speed up and plant 100 million trees each year.

“The company is also committed to upgrading the program and expanding its impact to other areas”, including in the fight against poverty, in overseas markets, and with small businesses, said Jing.

Ant Forest’s initiative is part of China’s overall contributi­ons to protect the environmen­t.

Afforestat­ion measures launched in China have increased the country’s forest stock by 4.56 billion cubic meters from 2005. Since 2000, China has contribute­d one-fourth of the world’s newly forested land, according to Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who delivered a speech on Sept 23 at the UN Climate Action Summit in New York.

“I am very pleased with the kind of progress we are seeing in China and in many other countries,” said Andersen.

This is the third consecutiv­e year that a Chinese entity has won the UN’s top environmen­tal award, which since 2005 has been recognizin­g outstandin­g leaders from government, civil society and the private sector that are helping the environmen­t.

In 2018, the Zhejiang Green Rural Revival Program won in the Inspiratio­n and Action category for its work to clean up polluted waterways and regenerate degraded land.

Two years ago, the Saihanba Afforestat­ion Community was recognized in the same category for transformi­ng degraded land on the southern edge of the Inner Mongolia autonomous region into a lush paradise.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Xu Di (center), general manager of Ant Forest, and Shen Junliang (left), a representa­tive of its app users, receive a 2019 Champions of the Earth award in New York on Sept 26.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Xu Di (center), general manager of Ant Forest, and Shen Junliang (left), a representa­tive of its app users, receive a 2019 Champions of the Earth award in New York on Sept 26.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States