China Daily (Hong Kong)

UN expert: Nation’s effort to fight desertific­ation worthy of praise

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s ongoing success in transformi­ng barren deserts into productive land should be emulated worldwide, especially by countries and regions involved in the Belt and Road Initiative, said a leading environmen­tal protection expert with the United Nations.

Recalling the “green miracle” in the Kubuqi Desert, China’s seventhlar­gest desert, Erik Solheim, executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme, said he was impressed by the collective efforts that thousands of people have made.

The total area of greenery in the desert has expanded by more than 6,000 square kilometers in the past three decades, according to government data from the Inner Mongolia autonomous region.

“China is a global leader in turning the tide on desertific­ation, as I have seen with my own eyes in Kubuqi. People coming from such poor circumstan­ces and used to living a life with hardly anything to eat once saw the desert as a big threat,” Solheim said.

“But under the collective efforts that thousands of people have made, the desert is now turning into a huge opportunit­y to create fortune through solar panels, ecotourism and forestatio­n,” he said.

He said China has found several workable solutions to combat desertific­ation, as shown not only by Kubuqi but also projects like Saihanba National Forest Park in Hebei province, which won a Champions of the Earth award during the UN Environmen­t Assembly in December last year.

Solheim said success stories in China cannot all be replicated elsewhere as flora in Inner

Mongolia or Hebei will be different from crops in other regions. However people can learn from the people’s talent, spirit and technology from those examples.

“What is the best practice and what can others learn are the most common questions we’ve encountere­d in green developmen­t,” he said. “Expert exchanges can help people share their experience­s from Inner Mongolia.”

He said Africa has some very dry areas with high population growth and limited job opportunit­ies. “If we could turn areas like Kubuqi into a success, why can’t deserts be opportunit­ies rather than threats in Africa and even benefit other regions like Iran?” he added.

Last year, a coalition for green developmen­t on the Belt and Road was jointly establishe­d by China and UNEP as an internatio­nal platform to share environmen­tal policies and experience­s among the countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative, and promote wider cooperatio­n.

The coalition will support putting together an ecological environmen­tal data platform related to the Belt and Road and encourage businesses to play active roles in the green developmen­t of the countries involved in the initiative.

Solheim believes the initiative proposed by President Xi Jinping will have enormous influence on the region’s developmen­t and UNEP also wants to guide it in a green direction.

“There’s so much we can do under the initiative and make this a driving force for environmen­tal developmen­t. Obviously it cannot just be in the partnershi­p between China and UNEP, but also with more partners, such as Sri Lanka, Kazakhstan, Ethiopia or any other nation involved in the Belt and Road,” he said.

China is now pursuing green developmen­t, which he believes will include stepping up efforts to establish a framework to push green production and consumptio­n, and promote a sound economic structure that facilitate­s green, low-carbon and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“It will be exciting to see how ecological civilizati­on will be put into action not just in China, but in China’s work abroad. I hope its partnershi­p with UNEP continues to deepen,” Solheim said.

“China can take this cause in its dealings with the rest of world as a powerful driver of positive global change,” he said.

The world is witnessing what may well turn out to be the definitive how-to guide on building a sustainabl­e economy that works in complete harmony with the environmen­t, Solheim said.

And policymake­rs have been facing an either-or propositio­n to a seemingly impossible equation: How to lift tens of millions of people out of poverty and at the same time preserve their natural environmen­t.

“Many countries have managed to upend this apparent trade-off in recent years, but for the larger economies, in most cases wealth has been built on unsustaina­ble growth.

“That is about to change, and I’m convinced China will now lead the way,” he said.

 ??  ?? Erik Solheim
Erik Solheim

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