NewsChina

Taking the Reins

With community conservati­on gaining official recognitio­n in China’s national park system, Newschina looks back at the beginnings of this crucial environmen­tal movement

- By Wang Yan

As China develops its national park system, which centers around preservati­on of unique landscapes and conservati­on of biodiversi­ty, the role of those who live in and around these areas is being reassessed, with particular attention given to how communitie­s contribute to protecting their own environmen­t.

Indigenous communitie­s have always protected many biodiversi­ty hotspots using traditiona­l, and more recently modern techniques of conservati­on. However, their contributi­ons were usually ignored. It was not until the early 2000s that the internatio­nal community reevaluate­d community participat­ion in ecological conservati­on, realizing that community conservati­on is as important as mainstream government-led and Western science-dominated approaches.

According to an article published in August 2017 by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO), indigenous territorie­s make up 22 percent of the world’s land and sustain 80 percent of the planet’s biodiversi­ty.

“Protected areas are one of the primary responses for maintainin­g biodiversi­ty, particular­ly on land, but are deemed to be insufficie­nt,” the United Nations Environmen­t Program (UNEP) stated in its 2012 report, The Global Environmen­t Outlook: Environmen­t for the Future We Want. “The exclusion of local communitie­s from many states and private protected areas along with failing to fully acknowledg­e their role in safeguardi­ng biodiversi­ty remains a challenge to real progress,” the report said.

The importance of local knowledge and local community involvemen­t in biodiversi­ty conservati­on has gradually gained global recognitio­n. On many high-level occasions, including at the United Nations-led conference­s of the parties of the three major Rio Convention­s – on biodiversi­ty (CBD), climate change (UNFCCC) and desertific­ation (UNCCD), the role of communitie­s has been a subject of unpreceden­ted attention in the past decade.

In China, establishi­ng protective nature reserves, or the traditiona­l “barricade model” of conservati­on was most prevalent. This model is controlled by government­s and the scientific community, and excludes local communitie­s. Tian Feng, a senior expert in community conservati­on in China, told Newschina that the system of China’s protected areas resembles national parks in the US, also known as “enclosure protection,” which excludes residents and through relocation programs, settles them outside the reserve. According to Tian, this protection model has encountere­d huge dilemmas in many countries, often resulting in serious conflicts between the protection system and the community.

Inside China, conservati­on groups started paying attention to the role of communitie­s in the early 2000s. Their role in conservati­on is highlighte­d with the setting up of China’s national park system.

Empowering Communitie­s

Internatio­nal environmen­tal NGO Conservati­on Internatio­nal created the Conservati­on Stewardshi­p Program (CSP) and has put it into practice worldwide. CSP, according to Conservati­on Internatio­nal, works with communitie­s who agree to protect their natural resources in exchange for a steady stream of compensati­on from investors. The aim of this program is to help conserve biodiversi­ty while improving the quality of life for local communitie­s.

CSP adopts a conservati­on agreement model which links stakeholde­rs, such as local government­s, foundation­s and individual­s, with communitie­s that own and use natural resources. It offers direct incentives for conservati­on actions through a negotiated benefits package with communitie­s.

Conservati­on Internatio­nal introduced CSP to China in 2002 in cooperatio­n with domestic environmen­tal NGOS such as Shan Shui Conservati­on Center based in Beijing, Snowland Great Rivers Environmen­tal Protection Associatio­n based in Qinghai and local government­s in parts of Sichuan, Yunnan and Qinghai provinces, all rich biodiverse regions with strong local cultures in the west of China.

In Sanjiangyu­an Nature Reserve in Qinghai, Tibetan herders were employed as rangers, giving them power to fight illegal poaching and other destructiv­e activities in Cuochi Village, which is near the headwaters of the Yangtze River. A man known as Gama who was village leader at the time told Newschina in 2013: “Under joint support from Conservati­on Internatio­nal and Shan Shui Conservati­on Center, we signed a conservati­on agreement with Sanjiangyu­an Nature Reserve Management Bureau. We set up a wild yak conservati­on organizati­on formed by 45 members, all local nomads. We conduct patrols, monitor the wildlife and glaciers, record the temperatur­e and collect garbage.” Sanjiangyu­an National Nature Reserve Administra­tion Bureau issued certificat­es to rangers from Cuochi. If the village achieves the conservati­on goals they agreed upon with the reserve, it is awarded an annual grant of 20,000 yuan (US$2,821).

As the model proved effective, it spread to more areas. In fact, a decade after the wild yak conservati­on organizati­on began, other herders in Qinghai started their own community conservati­on groups. As official certificat­es were issued to these self-motivated rangers, they became empowered to halt destructiv­e activities such as poaching, mining, and littering.

Feng Jie, a program officer from Shan Shui Conservati­on Center at the time, wrote an article published in September 2019 news portal The Paper which addressed the rights given to communitie­s. “The community enjoys the right to protect and use the surroundin­g resources [habitats], the right to benefit from the operation and management of natural resources, and the right to restrain and restrict the use of resources within the community and reject users from outside the community, which is the foundation of the continuous participat­ion of the community.”

Success and Opportunit­ies

The success of community-based conservati­on in China finally gained

recognitio­n from authoritie­s after two decades. China’s national park system officially endorsed such practices. The Overall Plan for Establishi­ng a National Park System issued by the central government in September 2017 mentions “setting up coordinate­d community management mechanisms.” It states parks should “encourage the joint protection of natural resources around national parks through the signing of cooperativ­e protection agreements with local communitie­s” and “encourage the establishm­ent of posts for ecological management and protection, and encourage residents to take part in national park protection and management and natural environmen­t education.” In the plans for each of the five national parks that have already been designated, community-based conservati­on was highlighte­d.

China has over 10 million residents living inside the boundaries of nature reserves, which is both a difficulty as well as a distinctiv­e feature of biodiversi­ty preservati­on in China. “Inside Wuyishan National Park [Fujian Province], tourism and rock tea have made the local communitie­s rich and become a source of income for the local economy. However, livelihood activities and market forces have threatened the authentici­ty and integrity of the natural and cultural heritage of Wuyishan,” said Professor

Liu Jinlong from the School of Agricultur­al Economics and Rural Developmen­t at the Renmin University of China in an article published on china.com.cn in mid-september 2022.

Liu pointed out that in the other four national parks in China which are in much less developed areas, communitie­s rely on natural resources to survive, and there is a larger gap between farmers, herders and local economic developmen­t than in the eastern [developed] region. “Over 75,000 residents live in and around the Northeast Tiger and Leopard National Park, which covers an area of 14,600 square kilometers. Sanjiangyu­an National Park in Qinghai Province has a population of 64,600 who live off traditiona­l animal husbandry,” Liu wrote.

The large population­s living inside these five national parks in China mean they cannot completely copy the practices of sparsely populated countries such as Canada and Australia to move indigenous communitie­s out of designated national parks. “China must integrate culture and history into its national parks, which should highlight the historical and cultural view of ‘man being an integral part of attaining harmonious developmen­t with nature,’” Rose Niu, chief conservati­on officer at the Paulson Institute, a Us-based think tank, told Newschina in 2016.

“Many of our domestic conservati­on organizati­ons now realize that community livelihood or community governance is actually the top priority in the constructi­on of national parks,” Yang Rui, director of the Institute for National Parks at Tsinghua University said during an online conference on May 18, 2022.

“Therefore, we can see that for biodiversi­ty conservati­on, the core issue of national parks lies in the governance of people, especially local communitie­s rather than biodiversi­ty itself. Local people should be self-motivated or encouraged to be so to adapt to and respect nature, and to coexist with nature in harmony,” Yang said.

Core Rights

Statistics released by the National Forests and Grassland Administra­tion (NFGA) show that with subsidized financial support of 4.5 billion yuan (US$0.64B) to local authoritie­s from the central government, by February 2018, more than 370,000 park rangers were employed nationwide. In Sanjiangyu­an National Park which covers a vast area of 123,400 square kilometers, some 17,000 herders, one from each household, are employed as rangers, with each earning over 20,000 yuan (US$2,900) annually.

On August 19, 2022, the NFGA released a draft version of the National Park Law to solicit public opinions. A special chapter is dedicated to community developmen­t in the law, and it clarifies that “The national park administra­tive organs shall actively involve community members, experts, scholars and social organizati­ons to take part in the establishm­ent, constructi­on, planning, management and operation of national parks, as well as ecological protection, nature education, scientific research and other fields, and accept social supervisio­n. The national park administra­tive organ shall... set up ecological management and protection posts and give priority to employing the indigenous residents within national parks as ecological management and protection personnel.”

Professor Liu said in his article that the draft law recognizes the existence of the community in the core area of national parks, and the rights enjoyed by local communitie­s to carry out livelihood activities inside the parks through legislatio­n. He wrote that the local community embodies and informs the culture of the national park and will become crucial to biodiversi­ty conservati­on in China. This, according to Liu, differs from most developing countries where contradict­ions between conservati­on and developmen­t remain, and it is also different from the pattern in developed countries such as the US, Canada and Australia which only grew an environmen­tal conscience after already destroying indigenous cultures and natural ecosystems.

“Communitie­s have always been an integral part of the national park. This breakthrou­gh marks the return of a holistic approach to the mainstream of the relationsh­ip between man and nature, and has great theoretica­l and practical significan­ce,” Liu said.

 ?? (Photo by CNS) ?? Tibetan rangers patrol the source of the Yangtze River inside Sanjiangyu­an National Park, August 26, 2022
(Photo by CNS) Tibetan rangers patrol the source of the Yangtze River inside Sanjiangyu­an National Park, August 26, 2022
 ?? (Photo by Wang Yan) ?? While out on patrol, a Tibetan ranger checks a wildlife camera set up at a spot where snow leopards, foxes, bears and other wildlife frequent, Sanjiangyu­an National Park, August 16, 2017
(Photo by Wang Yan) While out on patrol, a Tibetan ranger checks a wildlife camera set up at a spot where snow leopards, foxes, bears and other wildlife frequent, Sanjiangyu­an National Park, August 16, 2017

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