China Daily Global Edition (USA)

DCEPVCELOP­MENT

- Contact the writer at houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

ACTION IN A NEW ERA

Tuesday marks the third anniversar­y of the start of operations of the central route of the South-toNorth Water Diversion Project, a massive infrastruc­ture program designed to transport water from the south of the country to the arid northern regions via three separate channels.

So far, more than 10 billion cubic meters of water have been carried to North China via the central route, benefiting more than 53 million people.

The environmen­tal improvemen­ts that have resulted from protection efforts in the regions that supply the water — the provinces of Henan, Hubei and Shaanxi — have attracted investment and brought new job opportunit­ies in green industries, including tourism and ecological agricultur­e, benefiting people in the areas that supply the water.

Xia Qinghua is one of them. The 43-year-old was employed in a small toy factory in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, for 12 years before he returned to his home, Chenjiawan, a village in Hubei’s Shiyan city, in June.

He had long wanted to return, but was prevented by a shortage of jobs. However, the situation changed after Hubei Beidouxing Eco-agricultur­e and Forestry Co began investing in the area in 2014, lured by the cleaner environmen­t.

“Great improvemen­ts have happened to the environmen­t in my hometown. When I left at age 17, I had never seen an egret. Now, there are birds everywhere. They are beautiful,” he said.

Though he earned more than 5,000 yuan ($756) a month in Shenzhen, Xia often had to work until 11 pm.

“The salary was good, but I felt lonely and helpless because I had no family around me,” he said.

In 2011, he attempted to return to Chenjiawan, but the move wasn’t successful. “There weren’t many business opportunit­ies in the poverty-stricken area at the time,” he said. Xia had spent 50,000 yuan on a small truck and started a transporta­tion business, but he lost his investment and was 20,000 yuan in debt after a year, so he was forced to return to Shenzhen.

After that, he only returned home once a year, for the Spring Festival holiday, and leaving his family was always a tearful affair.

“I remember very clearly leaving home on the evening of the fifth day of the Lunar New Year in 2013. My wife, my daughter and I cried in each other’s arms. They all didn’t want me to go,” he recalled, tears glinting in his eyes.

Now, he works in the warehouse at a farm operated by Hubei Beidouxing, making about 2,000 yuan a month. Even though he earns less than he did in Shenzhen, Xia is much happier because he is close to his family and can care for his 70-year-old father, who is unwell. He supplement­s his income by leasing 0.5 hectares of farmland to Hubei Beidouxing, which brings in an extra 4,000 yuan a year.

Li Wei, head of the farm, said the company rents 200 hectares of land from residents of three nearby villages, which have a combined population of about 5,000. While 500 villagers work on the farm full time, a further 2,000 are employed seasonally every year.

So far, the company has invested 280 million yuan in the farm, which has been in operation since 2014. However, the enterprise only became profitable this year; Hubei Beidouxing made more than 2 million yuan from the sale of fruits and flowers, and the farm attracts a steady flow of visitors who come to view the blossoms on the trees and pick fruit, he said.

The company has bought a number of vehicles to provide free transporta­tion for sightseers. “The purpose of offering these services is not to make money. Instead, we hope to attract tourists and create business opportunit­ies for people in local villages,” Li added.

Some local residents have also started providing services in their homes, such as restaurant­s and guest rooms. In response to the rise in the number of visitors, Xia plans to provide tourist services too.

The most recent data is not yet available, but the Office of the South-to-North Water Diversion Project said that between 2011 and 2015 the central government invested more than 17 billion yuan in environmen­tal protection measures in the area that supplies the central route.

Beijing and Tianjin, two of the prime beneficiar­ies of the project, have also invested a combined 2.3 billion yuan in 650 projects, including a number designed to protect the environmen­t and develop ecological industries, such as eco-agricultur­e and tourism. The municipali­ties have also mobilized local businesses to invest 88 billion yuan in 118 projects.

In the past four years, Shiyan city, Hubei province, has invested 1.8 billion yuan ($272 million) in pollution control measures for five of its rivers, even though the volume of water that flows into the Danjiangko­u reservoir, a major source for the central route of the South-to-North Water Diversion Project, accounts for just 1 percent of the total.

More than 5.6 million metric tons of sludge and waste have been removed from the five rivers, which have a combined annual runoff of 380 million cubic meters and a total length of 271 kilometers, said Wu Fang, deputy director of the water diversion office in Shiyan.

A 1,258-kilometer pipeline system, which has separate channels for rainwater and sewage, has been built to aid pollution control, and 24 polluting companies have been closed down, she added.

The constructi­on of Shiyan, designed as a center for the automotive industry, began in 1969, but little attention was paid to building a sewage pipeline network, which makes pollution control difficult.

Having issued 600 million yuan worth of government bonds, the government of Shiyan — which is known as “China’s Detroit” — has also used the public-private partnershi­p model to encourage local companies to participat­e in pollution control work on the five rivers, according to Wu.

“There is almost no economic benefit, but treatment work on the five rivers has greatly improved the local environmen­t while ensuring that higher-quality Great improvemen­ts have happened in the environmen­t in my hometown. When I left at age 17, I had never seen an egret. Now, there are birds everywhere. They are beautiful.”

who has found a job in his hometown after 12 years as a migrant worker in Guangdong province

Marketing opportunit­ies

Last year, Chen Guosheng returned to his hometown of Shiquan county in Ankang city, Shaanxi, which is also located in the source area for the water diversion project.

The entreprene­ur was prompted to return by the rise in the number of business opportunit­ies resulting from the improvemen­t to the local environmen­t.

“The improvemen­ts have resulted in a lot of high-quality farm produce, but the local farmers don’t know how to market or sell the goods,” he said.

In response, Chen’s company, Shaanxi Baren Tourism and Culture Co, is building marketing channels, and has invested 20 million yuan to transform Zhongba, a small village, into a business hub.

His plan is that tourists will be able to visit for sightseein­g and also learn how to make local delicacies, including tofu and cooking oil, using local farm produce and traditiona­l facilities and methods. A trial has been in operation since Oct 1, while the village is being redevelope­d.

Chen also rents 67 hectares of land, which he has turned into a tea plantation. The leaves grown on the plantation are highly rated Xia Qinghua, by a tea merchant in Guangdong province, who has ordered a continuous supply.

Business opportunit­ies are also being nurtured in Madeng township, Nanyang city, Henan, via a 1,667-hectare forestry project intended to restore desertifie­d land in a mountainou­s area.

Two scenic spots are the township’s main tourist attraction­s, generating annual revenue of 35 million yuan. Now, the local government is using the forestry project, which has attracted investment of 82 million yuan, to widen the area’s appeal to visitors.

Cherry and Chinese cherry apple trees will be planted along roadsides to create attractive scenery, while pomegranat­es and walnuts will be cultivated to allow tourists to pick their own fruit, said Zhou Yushan, head of the Madeng government.

In 2009, the per capita income in the township was about 3,000 yuan, but this year the figure is double that thanks to the tourism boom. There are now more than 100 “farm resorts” in the township, according to Zhou.

“The environmen­tal improvemen­ts are bringing more opportunit­ies for the developmen­t of tourism. All nine registered impoverish­ed villages in the township will be lifted out of poverty by the end of the year,” he said. water flows into the Danjiangko­u reservoir,” she said.

One of the waterways, the Sihe River, is about 50 meters from Zhang Dazhen’s seeds and fertilizer store, but the 70-year-old refused to go near the river before 2013.

“It stank. Nobody wanted to come near it,” she said.

Now, though, Zhang takes a walk along the riverbank every morning and evening. “The water in the river is very clean now and it doesn’t smell anymore,” she said.

Traditiona­lly, Chinese women wash clothes in rivers. Zhou Rongying has lived in Wangjiayua­n village, Shiyan, for eight years. The Jianhe River, one of the five waterways, is near her home, but the water was too dirty to use for washing clothes until last year.

“The sewer adjacent to the river was so dirty. Now, all the wastewater is collected for treatment, making the river water clean for washing clothes,” the 80-year-old said.

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