China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Natural shared future

Building an ecological civilizati­on offers developing countries a solution to conserving biodiversi­ty

- XIE YI The author is a professor with Beijing Forestry University. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

Building protected areas is a common practice and an important way of protecting biodiversi­ty. According to the Protected Planet Report 2020 by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme and the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature, 42 percent of the area now marked protected and conserved worldwide was added during the period from 2010 to 2020, making it one of the few goals of the Aichi Biodiversi­ty Targets to have been partially realized. It lays a solid foundation for biodiversi­ty conservati­on and brings huge benefits to humanity.

Since it joined the Convention on Biological Diversity in 1992, China has taken effective measures to conserve biodiversi­ty and it has enhanced its efforts to build protected areas in accordance with the requiremen­ts of the convention. In recent years, China has been moving faster to establish a protected areas system with national parks as the mainstay.

By the end of 2020, China had 11,800 protected areas of various types. They cover 18 percent of the country’s land area, meeting the Aichi Targets’ goal of protecting 17 percent of terrestria­l areas ahead of schedule. The protected areas system with national parks as a major component is playing an increasing­ly significan­t role in connecting people with nature and conserving biodiversi­ty.

The natural protected areas are attracting more and more people to enjoy the beauty of nature and relax both physically and spirituall­y. In 2021, more than 2 billion visits were made to the country’s protected areas. In the first batch of five national parks — namely the ThreeRiver-Source National Park, the Wuyishan National Park, the Giant Panda National Park, the Northeast China Tiger and Leopard National Park and the Hainan Tropical Rainforest National Park — teenagers have the opportunit­y to relish the primitive beauty and wonders of nature and learn about ecological conservati­on.

In many protected areas, such as the Xishuangba­nna National Nature Reserve and Poyang Lake, ecotourism has been thriving, with tourists flocking to relax in the lap of nature. Other nature reserves such as forest parks, wetland parks and geological parks are also attracting people to have close contacts with nature during weekends and holidays. The growing diversifie­d green services and products provided by protected areas have raised citizens’ awareness of ecological conservati­on.

In terms of biodiversi­ty conservati­on, China’s protected areas have brought 90 percent of terrestria­l ecosystem types and 85 percent of key State-protected wildlife specifies under effective protection. The first batch of five national parks are sanctuarie­s for rare animals such as giant pandas, Siberian tigers, Amur leopard, black crested gibbon, and white-lipped deer, as well as key State-protected wild plants such as Cycas hainanensi­s and Hopea hainanensi­s.

As the sole habitat of wild Asian elephants in China, Yunnan province has seen the population of elephants grow from 150 in 1975 to 360, and core population live in nature reserves such as the one in Xishuangba­nna. By providing shelter for wildlife, nature reserves are playing an exemplary role in building a shared home for all life on Earth.

These achievemen­ts can be credited to China’s consistent efforts to build an ecological civilizati­on, including its adhering to an ecological “redline” strategy, and leveraging its advantage in mobilizing resources to accomplish major initiative­s. These achievemen­ts have offered the global community, especially developing countries, which are plagued by resources and environmen­tal constraint­s caused by fastgrowin­g population, urbanizati­on and economic developmen­t, a solution to conserving biodiversi­ty and building a shared future for all life on Earth.

Some world-famous national parks, such as the Yellowston­e

National Park in the United States, Kellerwald-Edersee National Park in Germany and Serengeti National Park in Tanzania, are uninhabite­d. But in China, national parks and nature reserves are home to a large number of human residents. In the Three-River-Source National Park, for example, there are more than 60,000 herdsmen from 16,000 households. And a survey in 2013 found that China’s nature reserves were home to more than 10 million people.

As such, the country’s protected areas are intended to protect not only ecosystems, natural scenery and biodiversi­ty, but also cultural relics within each region, and serve as ecological demonstrat­ion zones where human and nature coexist harmonious­ly, and economic developmen­t doesn’t come at the expense of biodiversi­ty. One such example is Wuyishan National Park where local farmers’ incomes have increased through growing eco-friendly tea, with technical support from the park’s administra­tion.

China’s natural protected areas not only include State-owned land, but also collective­ly-owned rural land, particular­ly collective forest land. To safeguard the interests and rights of owners of collective forest land, administra­tions of protected areas have to sign a trusteeshi­p agreement with local communitie­s before incorporat­ing collective forest land into nature reserves. The forests covered by protected areas should be managed for ecological significan­ce, which must not be cut down for timber. The financial losses incurred can be offset through the ecological compensati­on mechanism.

For instance, 80 percent of the forests in the Qianjiangy­uan National Forest Park in Zhejiang province, which was establishe­d in 2018, is collective­ly owned. All the 21 administra­tive villages involved have signed a trusteeshi­p agreement with the park administra­tion, with ecological compensati­on covered by provincial fiscal revenue.

The natural protected areas are attracting more and more people to enjoy the beauty of nature and relax both physically and spirituall­y. In 2021, more than 2 billion visits were made to the country’s protected areas.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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