China Daily (Hong Kong)

World can learn from Chinese afforestat­ion

Success in controllin­g land degradatio­n and desertific­ation provides lessons

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s successful experience­s controllin­g desertific­ation and land degradatio­n offer an instructiv­e solution for the world to mitigate and adapt to the global climate crisis, officials said.

They made the remarks as the two-day Kubuqi Internatio­nal Desert Forum opened in Ordos, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on Tuesday. It is the eighth edition of the biennial forum since the first event was held in 2007.

By firmly sticking to a green developmen­t philosophy, China has managed to reverse the exacerbati­on of land degradatio­n and desertific­ation, said Wan Gang, vice-chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference.

Addressing the opening ceremony via a video link, Wan, also president of the China Associatio­n for Science and Technology, said the country has seen the area of land that suffers from such problems decrease for over 10 consecutiv­e years.

Kubuqi, China’s seventh-largest desert, is one of the best examples of that positive progress, he said.

A combinatio­n of charitable contributi­ons and industrial developmen­t has seen almost 646,000 hectares of the desert afforested, he said. Aside from generating a remarkable improvemen­t in local biodiversi­ty, afforestat­ion has lifted over 100,000 rural residents out of poverty.

Wan said the mode of afforestat­ion and the many desertific­ation control technologi­es that emerged in the Kubuqi have been introduced to countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative, including Pakistan, Uzbekistan and Saudi Arabia, offering a solution to control the 36 million square kilometers of land around the world that is affected by desertific­ation.

“I look forward to seeing China join hands with even more countries and regions in preventing and controllin­g desertific­ation to promote global green and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” he said.

Referring to the forum as a “continuing success”, Ibrahim Thiaw, executive secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertific­ation, commended China on its afforestat­ion endeavors and called on the world to enhance land management.

The forum advances the fight against desertific­ation and land degradatio­n, and shows the value of collaborat­ion at all levels in tackling issues such as biodiversi­ty loss and climate change, he said.

“In particular, it highlights the importance of restoring the balance between people and nature,” Thiaw said.

He said the loss of fertile lands and the impact of climate change, combined with the COVID-19 pandemic, have underscore­d the importance of accelerati­ng a green revolution to save the environmen­t and make Earth a better home for everyone.

“Through more frequent and severe natural disasters, nature is sending us a message which we choose to ignore at our own risk,” he said. “Therefore, all countries need to embrace innovative, coordinate­d, green and open developmen­t for everyone to achieve a green recovery in the post-COVID19 period.”

President Xi Jinping announced last year that China aims to see carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060.

“These are urgent global goals for slowing if not holding the rate of climate change,” Thiaw said.

Land-based solutions are essential for climate mitigation, adaptation and resilience building, he said, adding that sustainabl­e, integrated, systematic and innovative land management can help combat climate change by maintainin­g balance while also providing many benefits.

“China has a well-establishe­d terrestria­l spatial planning system. It coordinate­s land use for food security, environmen­tal conservati­on and urban-rural developmen­t,” he said. “The new five-year plan to afforest 36,000 square kilometers every year is ambitious but achievable with the political will.”

By creating partnershi­ps in ecological and environmen­tal governance, scientific and technologi­cal innovation, energy transforma­tion and green financial developmen­t, and with the vision of carbon neutrality, “we can make Earth a better and safer place for future generation­s,” Thiaw said.

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