China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Eco-restoratio­n project raises living standards An environmen­tal cleanup is creating jobs and wealth in one of China’s least-developed provinces, as Yang Wanli and Yang Jun report from Guiyang.

- Contact the writers at yangwanli@ chinadaily.com.cn

Tan Wenzhong is a garbage collector, but rather than working on the streets, he spends his days on water. Every day at 8 am, Tan boards his yellow boat and begins work. He collects garbage floating in the Nanming River, a tributary of the Yangtze River, that flows eastward through Guiyang, capital of Guizhou province.

For the past two decades, the river has been severely polluted by untreated domestic sewage from the homes of the city’s population of nearly 5 million.

“My home is near the Nanming. For about 10 years, we almost never opened the windows closest to the river. If we did, the stench that rose from the water smelled like a pit latrine that hadn’t been emptied for months,” said Zhao Ze, 31, who lives with his parents in an apartment building built in the 1990s.

The water in the river once ran black as a result of pollution. In the early ’90s many State-owned enterprise­s and government department­s built or invested in real estate for their employees.

Those assigned apartments near the river were the most unfortunat­e, according to Tan, who recalled that at the turn of the century the river was full of trash, such as plastic bags, food containers and countless plastic water bottles.

“When I was young, the river was the source of drinking water for the local residents. Fish and egrets could always be seen, but they were quickly swept away by the pollution. In 2000, I cleaned about 1 metric ton of garbage from the river every day. I was astonished by the amount,” the 53-year-old said.

Pollution, purificati­on

The local government began addressing the problem in the early 2000s, and a number of wide-ranging programs were launched in 2012. They included cleaning the riverbed silt and controllin­g the sources of pollution, while water control gates and a high-tech purificati­on system were put into use.

In the past five years, the quality of the water in the river has improved significan­tly, according to the Guiyang water affairs bureau. Its data shows that 70 percent of the water in the river last year was judged to be either level III, which means it is suitable for swimming and use in aquacultur­e, or level IV, suitable for industrial use and other pursuits where the water does not come into contact with the skin, such as angling.

The methods used to control pollution in the river are a microcosm of the city government’s project to conserve natural resources and raise living standards through eco-revitaliza­tion.

The plan’s core theme is “sharing”, which emphasizes that all projects should be people-oriented to encourage the participat­ion of residents, who will share its success.

Parks and plants

The Qingshan Sewage Plant, is hard to find — partly because the entrance is hidden among flowers and trees, but mainly because most of the facility is undergroun­d. The plant, which covers 2.1 hectares, is directly below a large park dotted with gym equipment and jogging tracks.

Sun Yun visits the park every day to practice tai chi. “In the past, we made a detour around the riverbank to avoid the smell, but now the riverbank is a popular spot for sports lovers,” he said.

Opened in 2012, the sewage plant is one of three undergroun­d facilities built in the city in recent years. They all use filtering membranes and biotechnol­ogy to purify the water, and each is capable of dealing with 50,000 tons of water a day to serve the needs of the 260,000 people in their catchments areas.

“The park’s landscape features use river water that is purified at the plant. The cost of building a plant undergroun­d is double that of facilities built above ground, but the money made by saving the land for commercial use will offset the constructi­on costs, said Han Yiqin, the director.

Eco-revitaliza­tion will improve people’s living circumstan­ces and breathe fresh vitality into real estate projects along the river. According to Zhao, new apartments built near his home are priced between 17,000 yuan and 25,000 yuan ($2,569 and $3,778) per square meter, far more than his own residence.

Partnershi­ps

To finance the eco-revitaliza­tion program, a public-private partnershi­p has been introduced under which the city government purchases services from private companies and organizati­ons that specialize in certain fields.

The partnershi­p significan­tly improves work efficiency, according to Lan Yitong, committee director of the city’s publicity department.

“Guiyang is nestled in a mountainou­s area, and developmen­t has been limited by geography for decades. However, the mountains can also be used as resources to boost ecoindustr­y. Eco-revitaliza­tion will not only ‘green’ the city, but also provide more favorable living conditions and more jobs for local people,” she said.

As the mountains dominate more than half of Guiyang’s total area, the city government is hoping to turn them into major attraction­s by investing more than 40 billion yuan in three major projects: pollution control in the Nanming River; the greening of 100 mountains; and the constructi­on of 1,000 parks within the city boundaries. It aims to complete the projects by 2020.

Quanhu Park, in Baiyun district, is a model park in the plan. Constructe­d early last year and covering 72 hectares, it sits next to a large secondhand vehicle market on the site of a village that had been deserted since its inhabitant­s were relocated.

A lake in the center of the park was once a pond where people dumped domestic waste and sewage. Now, the park is a scenic spot and boasts Guizhou’s largest musical fountain, where people can watch free movies projected onto a screen of water at weekends and during holidays.

New talent

The municipal government has set a goal of raising forestry coverage to 50 percent and the per capita area of green land to 17 square meters by 2020. Moreover, it plans to introduce measures to ensure that the quality of the air is excellent on at least 65 days every year.

The city’s eco-revolution is also bringing new opportunit­ies to attract fresh talent and cut unemployme­nt.

According to Lan, some of the new parks have been designed to provide an attractive environmen­t in an area known as University Town with the aim of attracting a high-tech companies and new talent. In Huaxi district, several parks that boasts entertainm­ent facilities have already become tourist attraction­s.

The improved urban environmen­t has also resulted in higher values for land and real estate.

Denggaoyun­shan Forest Park, between Yunyan and Wudang districts, is one such example; it was once a dump for constructi­on waste, but in the past year it has undergone a massive replanting program and is now covered with trees and flowers.

Sales of real estate projects in the area were poor for many years, but in the past 10 months, prices have soared by 2,000 yuan per sq m on average, according to Gao Xiaowen, deputy director of the Guiyang Ecological Civilizati­on Constructi­on Committee.

The same thing has happened in other areas where the eco-reconstruc­tion project has been carried out. Apartments close to Quanhu Park that once sold for 1,000 yuan per sq m are now priced at 4,000 to 5,000 yuan, and the price of land has soared from 16.6 million yuan per hectare to 50 million yuan.

Gao estimated that the park, together with a Buddhist cultural center that is under constructi­on, will add about 2 billion yuan to the price of land nearby and benefit five new residentia­l buildings whose apartments are now estimated to be worth at least 800 million yuan in total.

“A large amount of human resources will be needed, which will mean more job opportunit­ies. Eco-revitaliza­tion encourages shared benefits, and soon, the local people will see how they can share in the city’s reconstruc­tion plan and also how nature will play a role as one of our leading treasures,” he said.

 ??  ?? Quanhu Park is a model attraction in Guiyang’s ecological restoratio­n program.
Quanhu Park is a model attraction in Guiyang’s ecological restoratio­n program.
 ??  ?? Aquatic garbage collectors at work on the Nanming River.
Aquatic garbage collectors at work on the Nanming River.

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