China Today (English)

A Green Community with a Shared Future

- By staff reporters ZHOU LIN & ZHANG XI

THE Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) since its birth in 2013 has made numerous accomplish­ments in policy consultati­on, infrastruc­ture connectivi­ty, trade promotion, financial cooperatio­n, and peopleto-people exchanges. Meanwhile, great progress has also been achieved in implementi­ng the concept of building a green community with a shared future for mankind.

Green Envoys Program

In March 2019, Khin Cho Cho Shein and other participan­ts were invited to Beijing to attend the China-ASEAN Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n Week. Shein is from the Ministry of Transport and Communicat­ions of Myanmar, and received training in meteorolog­y in China’s Nanjing University a decade ago. After finishing her studies, she took back what she had learned about advanced ideas and technology and applied them in her work. She felt in

credibly excited at the opportunit­y of visiting China again.

“Myanmar is taking action to deal with environmen­tal changes, which tallies with the United Nation’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals 2030 and China’s proposal of building a green Silk Road. Therefore, the Myanmar government is implementi­ng a series of action plans which include related policies, implementa­tion organizati­ons, and financial and high-tech initiative­s. Meanwhile, it strives to estab

lish a green partnershi­p with nations along the BRI routes.” Shein introduced her colleagues from the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection who accompanie­d her, “They are responsibl­e for making macro-policies, while our staff members from the Ministry of Transport and Communicat­ions collaborat­e with them to design specific plans.”

This five-day environmen­tal cooperatio­n program includes multiple activities such as the China-ASEAN National Focal Point Meeting on Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n, the Seminar on ChinaASEAN Cooperatio­n for Eco-friendly Cities 2019, Task Force Meeting and Workshop on Operationa­l and Technical Issues of China-ASEAN Environmen­tal Informatio­n Sharing Platform (EISP) 2019, and China-ASEAN Capacity Building Workshop on Climate Change Policies and Actions. Talking about her expectatio­ns, Shein hoped it would result in more pragmatic cooperatio­n in environmen­tal protection and sustainabl­e developmen­t between Myanmar and China.

There have been lots of such exchanges and research programs concerning environmen­tal protection between China and other BRI countries.

In July 2018, China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t and Laos’ Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing on Cooperatio­n in Environmen­tal Protection and the ChinaLaos Cooperativ­e Action Plan on Ecological Environmen­t (2018-2022), which showed that the two countries had reached a consensus on cooperatio­n in specific areas. Four months later, the Lancang-Mekong Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n Center organized a Chinese delegation to carry out inspection­s in Laos. They visited the country’s atmospheri­c environmen­t monitoring system, movable air-quality surveillan­ce station, sewage discharge system, the natural waste-water treatment system around the Thatluang reservoir, and the sanitary landfill facilities in Luang Prabang.

Virasack Chundara, director of Laos’ Natural Resources and Environmen­t Institute, accompanie­d the Chinese delegation on their inspection tour. He said, “Air-quality surveillan­ce is an absolutely new field of work for Laos, and there is only one fixed monitoring site and one movable surveillan­ce vehicle in Vientiane. The collected data are very basic and cannot meet our needs. Therefore, we are looking forward to learning from China’s experience in this area.”

Laotian trainees are also eager to learn from China’s sewage treatment experience. An official from the Bureau of Natural Resources and Environmen­t in Luang Prabang Province expressed his wish to improve their capabiliti­es in environmen­tal governance via the training programs organized and sponsored by the Lancang-Mekong Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n Center.

“Laos’ natural conditions are fairly good, but there are still some environmen­tal problems, particular­ly in the Luang Prabang Province where the hydropower stations, mining exploratio­n, and booming tourism have resulted in large amounts of untreated sewage water which have been directly discharged into rivers. We need to work closely with government­al and non-government­al organizati­ons, the Lancang-Mekong Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n Center in particular, to pool their wisdom and get support in technology and equipment for environmen­tal management, pollution surveillan­ce, and sewage treatment,” said the official.

Early in 2016, the China-ASEAN Messenger Program, a training program on environmen­tal cooperatio­n, was upgraded to the China-ASEAN Green Envoys Program. Through various projects including capacity-building for policy makers and industry cooperatio­n, this program aims at promoting regional ecological and environmen­tal cooperatio­n, advancing regional sustainabl­e developmen­t, and jointly building up a flagship program along the green Silk Road.

In 2019, over 150 representa­tives participat­ed in the five-day training in Beijing. They hailed from China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese provinces of Yunnan, Zhejiang, Hainan, Hunan and Guangdong, and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and also the ASEAN Secretaria­t and the relevant department­s of ASEAN member nations, as well as internatio­nal organizati­ons including the United Nation Environmen­t Programme, Stockholm Environmen­t Institute, and the Energy Foundation.

Zhang Jieqing, deputy director of the Department of Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n and Exchange of China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, welcomed the ASEAN member nations’ participat­ion in the building of a green Silk Road, especially in joining the Internatio­nal Coalition for Green Developmen­t on the BRI and the BRI ecological and environmen­tal big data service platform, so as to implement the UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

An Eco-friendly Industrial Park

The China-Belarus Industrial Park, named Great Stone, is a landmark

There have been lots of such exchanges and research programs concerning environmen­tal protection between China and other BRI countries.

project located in Minsk, a vital hub city on the Silk Road Economic Belt linking Europe and Asia. May 11, 2018 witnessed the opening ceremony of the China-Belarus Friendship Park within the Great Stone. In order to provide the newly arrived enterprise­s and the public an eco-friendly working environmen­t and a livable community, 700 seedlings have been planted within the park with a survival ratio of 99 percent.

According to Mikhail Zagorzev, director of the Smolevichs­ky District of Minsk region where the Great Stone is located, there was criticism and objections when the district was first chosen to host the site. The main conflict was caused by fears of the densely forested land being turned into dusty constructi­on sites and rows upon rows of factories and plants.

When the Chinese delegation visited the site and saw the dense woodland and the birds flying by, they promised to protect its original ecology and minimize the damage to nature. “I was deeply moved and felt relieved when I heard those words from the interprete­r,” Zagorzev recalled. The two nature reserves there were completely retained during the exploratio­n and developmen­t of the industrial park. The industrial park’s administra­tive center signed an agreement on ecological protection with the local government, dispelling the public misgivings about the park.

The constructi­on of the infrastruc­ture facilities in phase one of the industrial park was officially launched in March 2015. Bai Xiujun, a program manager from China CAMC Engineerin­g Co., Ltd. who was in charge of the infrastruc­ture constructi­on, recalled, “When we started to build the first road – Minsk Street, officials of the Belorussia­n government came to inspect our work every day, and every detail must meet their standards. For instance, in China the builders are required to build five to 10 meters wide

green belts on both sides of a road, but in Minsk, such green belts must be at least 25 meters wide, and the fallen branches in the forests 50 meters away should all be cleared away, otherwise you will be fined. Neverthele­ss, thanks to these rigid standards and requiremen­ts, we’ve establishe­d even stricter rules for project management.”

The new philosophy for green developmen­t proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed in words “lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets” has been fully applied to the constructi­on of the China-Belarus Industrial Park. While developing modern manufactur­ing, the industrial park also aims to build a new town suitable for living and business. To this end, the companies that had been recognized by the European Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) were invited to evaluate and audit the environmen­tal performanc­e of the industrial park so as to make the park comply with the unified European environmen­tal standards.

The master plan for the Great Stone Park was designed to include existing residentia­l areas and ecological reserves, retaining 15 villages and 13 plantation­s. The green coverage rate of the park reaches almost 50 percent. An internatio­nal green town with advanced ecological ideas is rising in Minsk.

Sustainabl­e Leather Industry

Far away on the African continent, Ethiopia has also joined the team of building a green Silk Road. Via cooperatio­n with China to strengthen personnel training and update its industrial chain technology and equipment, the leather industry of the country has stepped on a path towards sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Chen Guodong is a trainer at the China-Ethiopia Leather Industry Joint Laboratory. He has been responsibl­e for the training of Ethiopian workers in equipment installati­on and adjustment,

The new philosophy for green developmen­t proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping has been fully applied to the constructi­on of the China-Belarus Industrial Park.

and sewage treatment since 2013. He often speaks highly of Ethiopia’s natural beauty and its people, “It boasts a pleasant climate, beautiful scenery as well as a simple and honest people. Being there you’ll feel like you’re in China’s Yunnan.”

Ethiopia is seated in the core of the Horn of Africa, famous for its vast plateau and the East African Great Rift Valley. Its livestock population comes first in Africa, giving it an advantage in developing leather industry.

Along with the developmen­t of the leather industry, the discharge of tannery waste water has gradually become a restrictiv­e factor to the industry’s sustainabl­e developmen­t in Ethiopia. Chen explained, “The leather industry has made great contributi­ons to economic growth, but the pollution issues are serious and have to be tackled, otherwise we will lose in the future. China’s leather industry has not only updated its manufactur­ing technology and improved the equipment, but also set up the industry standards to regulate the sector. Sharing the experience­s with Ethiopia would be useful to the further developmen­t of the country’s leather industry, and will also lay a solid foundation for the export of China’s leather technology.”

On November 25, 2013, in the presence of China’s Vice Premier Liu Yandong and Deputy Prime Minister of Ethiopia Demeke Mekonnen, the ministries of science and technology of the two countries signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing on the constructi­on of the China-Ethiopia Leather Industry Joint Laboratory.

Chen said, “While doing research on Ethiopia’s leather industry, I found that the equipment and technology of local enterprise­s were fairly advanced, but since the process of microorgan­ism treatment was very complicate­d, it often was unable to be carried through during the production. To meet the needs of Ethiopia, our laboratory mainly provides training in the treatment techniques of sewage and the chromium-containing hazardous waste, as well as the use of relevant equipment. The process of leather manufactur­ing, such as soaking, degreasing, unhairing, often produces large quantities of industrial effluents. The tannery waste water recycling technologi­es developed by China can lower the chemical oxygen demand in sewage to under 100, and the operation process is quite simple. Such treated waste water can not only be reused but also has little impact on the environmen­t.”

Besides technology, a complete set of Chinese equipment has also been provided to Ethiopia, and related workers have received training in both Ethiopia and China. Chen said, “Our trainees need to understand the details of our technologi­es and be familiar with the equipment. After training, they’ve acquired new knowledge and skills, and developed profession­al capabiliti­es. The laboratory is a technical support base open to local enterprise­s where they can visit and learn the latest technologi­es so as to promote their own technologi­cal innovation and industrial upgrading.”

Chernet Yonas Kebede used to be a staff member of the laboratory. After receiving systematic training, he has grown from a grassroots worker into a technician.

From November 2013 to November 2017, a total of 76 Ethiopians received training at the China-Ethiopia Leather Industry Joint Laboratory, improving their skills in making leather and raising their awareness of and technical competency in environmen­tal protection. As a result, the laboratory provides human resources guarantees for the improvemen­t of Ethiopia’s leather manufactur­ing techniques and its capabiliti­es in achieving goals for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Over the past six years since the BRI was initiated, China and the nations along the Silk Road routes have made remarkable achievemen­ts in innovating environmen­tal cooperatio­n mechanisms, expanding fields of cooperatio­n, and developing new forms of cooperatio­n. The concept of a green, ecofriendl­y, and sustainabl­e developmen­t has been widely accepted, and the cooperatio­n programs in various fields of environmen­tal protection have stepped onto the track of rapid developmen­t. Accordingl­y more and more people have joined the team of building a green “community with a shared future for mankind.” C

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 ??  ?? Substation and fire station in the China-Belarus Industrial Park (under constructi­on).
Substation and fire station in the China-Belarus Industrial Park (under constructi­on).
 ??  ?? Staff of the Sino-Ethiopian Leather Industry Developmen­t Institute.
Staff of the Sino-Ethiopian Leather Industry Developmen­t Institute.
 ??  ?? Aerial photo of the China-Belarus Industrial Park.
Aerial photo of the China-Belarus Industrial Park.

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