China Daily (Hong Kong)

Seven decades on, Tibet ecology a success story

- By DAQIONG in Lhasa and LI LEI in Beijing Contact the writers at lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

The Tibet autonomous region has made steady progress in addressing desertific­ation along with other environmen­tal issues in recent years as it seeks to build an ecological security shield on the frigid Qinghai-Tibet plateau in Southwest China, a regional government official said on Friday.

The region’s forested areas had reached more than 12 percent of its total area by 2020, with 81.4 billion yuan ($12.6 billion) worth of funding having been pumped into local environmen­t restoratio­n efforts over the past seven decades, said Luo Jie, head of Tibet’s ecology and environmen­t department.

Arid desert areas shrank by 200,000 hectares between 2004 and 2014, and over the period natural grassland coverage rose to 47 percent of the region’s area, Luo said at a news conference in Lhasa.

Forty-seven natural reserves — including 11 national ones — have been set up since 1988. The reserves amount to about 420,000 square kilometers, or one-third of the region’s territory — a milestone marking the progress made since Tibet’s peaceful liberation 70 years ago, he added.

The concentrat­ion of PM2.5 — particulat­e matter with a diameter of 2.5 micrometer­s or less — has plummeted 37.5 percent compared with 2015 levels, and wastewater and solid waste treatment in urbanized areas exceeded 96 percent, Luo said.

Tibet — home to antelope and several other endangered species along with vast ecological­ly vulnerable lands — had just three people overseeing environmen­tal issues in 1975, and the number reaching more than 1,000 by 2019, with a sprawling presence in every countyleve­l jurisdicti­on, figures from the regional government showed.

More than 70 local laws and rules regarding the region’s ecology and environmen­tal protection have been passed since the region’s liberation.

The improvemen­ts seen in one of the country’s most ecological­ly fragile regions came after central authoritie­s in 2017 launched a sweeping campaign to curb pollution and address other environmen­tal issues. To win the campaign, the regional government has focused on three areas — air, water and soil quality. Five local campaigns have been launched, including one targeting diesel trucks.

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