China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US-China ties boost climate actions

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

Years of cooperatio­n between Oregon, United States, and its sister states in China have inspired both sides to exchange informatio­n and share projects to advance their climate actions.

“We are one planet and the actions taken or not taken by one jurisdicti­on inevitably affect the other,” Oregon State Senator Michael Dembrow said at a conference held at Fuzhou in China’s Fujian province. “Global climate action must entail both friendly competitio­n and also productive partnershi­ps.”

Dembrow attended the 3rd China-Oregon Forum on Climate Change and Sustainabi­lity during his visit to Fujian on a goodwill mission. The forum, which was livestream­ed for the US audience, brought officials and researcher­s together from Oregon and its sister states – Fujian province and Tianjin municipali­ty -- to explore knowledge and share practices in fighting biodiversi­ty loss and climate crisis.

One of the forum highlights was signing an agreement between Crater Lake National Park in Oregon and Wuyishan National Park in Fujian. The agreement was inspired by the 2023 conference that placed importance on national park conservati­on in both countries.

“This is a trend that will continue particular­ly as we move forward from the COVID pandemic [period],” said Dembrow.

Crater Lake National Park in Oregon and Wuyishan National Park in Fujian establishe­d a relationsh­ip seven years ago. “This is a proud accomplish­ment that I hope will be carried along into the future based on mutual friendship and respect. There is much that we can learn from each other about honoring our heritage,” said Craig Ackerman, superinten­dent of Crater Lake National Park.

Ackerman said national parks and protected areas are unique lands in both countries and they can serve as an early warning system to threats from climbing temperatur­es, drought, and other environmen­tal conditions.

For example, climate changedriv­en impacts from white pine blister rust and infestatio­ns of mountain pine beetles are devastatin­g forests throughout the Cascades and Rocky Mountains of the United States, and research is being conducted at Crater Lake on identifyin­g and cloning DNA-resistant species of white bark pine, Ackerman said.

He also said research and mitigation efforts will be shared and that impacts from increasing pressure of public visitation in vulnerable areas is also being investigat­ed in cooperatio­n with other countries, including China.

Under the agreement with Wuyishan, “we will seek to encourage exchanges between concerned land managers in China and Oregon … and strive to engage universiti­es and profession­als to collaborat­e on research,’’ he added.

Another research project is the study of forest fires by the faculties at Oregon State University and Fujian Agricultur­e and Forestry University.

Wang Yuzhe, an associate professor at Fujian Agricultur­e and Forestry University, will travel to Oregon later this month to work with Thomas DeLuca, dean of the College of Forestry at Oregon State University, as a visiting scholar for a year.

They have worked together in China before and this time their study will be the HJ Andrews Experiment­al Forest, an ecological research site in Oregon, said Wang.

“We will work together to study both recurrent fire as well as varied fire severity on the forest and the Bedrock Fire which occurred on federal forest land,” said DeLuca, who attended the conference virtually.

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