The World of Chinese

As China aims to create 60 national parks by 2035, what will happen to the 12 million human residents inside protected areas?

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On the rough cement of a pitchblack village road sometime before midnight, a family hacked at the hind meat from the carcass of a cow.

“It starved to death because there wasn’t enough land to graze,” claimed one man. The family was in a rush to get the cuts to market by morning, as their livelihood largely depended on their cow herd, which grazed illegally within the bounds of

Momoge National Nature Reserve, a 1,440-square-kilometer wetland in northeaste­rn Jilin province in which the family lives.

It is estimated that 12 million people live within the borders of China’s sprawling system of over 1,600 nature reserves, where residents and conservati­onists are set on a collision course.

“Ecological protection and economic developmen­t have always been at odds,” sighs Zou Changlin, a park ranger at Momoge. “And we are a classic example of this historical problem.”

The reserve was created in 1981 to protect Siberian cranes, a critically endangered species according to the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature, and for which loss of habitat along their migration route is a key threat to survival. As China’s northeast has industrial­ized over the past century, more and more cranes are squeezed into Momoge’s shallow waters to refuel along their 10,000-kilometer flight.

When Ranger Zou began working in the park in 2003, only around 300 Siberian cranes landed in Momoge each year. Now, a staggering majority of up to 3,200 of the world’s remaining population of 4,000

Siberian cranes land in Momoge each year. “They have nowhere else to go,” says Zou. Yet Momoge’s protection zone also includes 102,000 people who had lived in the area’s 37 villages long before the reserve was built.

Coexistenc­e between humans and nature are a key question facing China’s new system of protected natural areas, as China seeks to create an “ecological civilizati­on,” to quote President Xi Jinping’s guiding philosophy. In the shifting tide of China’s political priorities, environmen­tal targets are coming to the forefront, after decades of promoting rapid economic growth over all else.

China is one of 17 “megabiodiv­erse” countries in the world, according to the United Nations Environmen­t Program, hosting 12 percent of plant species and 15 percent of all vertebrate­s on earth. However, degrading ecosystem health is driving rapid loss of habitat. Since the 1950s, over a half of the country’s coastal wetlands have disappeare­d to land reclamatio­n; only 5 percent of land cover remains primary forest; more than a quarter of China’s grasslands were lost to farming and mining activities in just a decade, and 90 percent of the country’s remaining grassland is in poor condition.

Last year, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and

Ministry of Natural Resources jointly released ecological targets for natural forests, grasslands, wetlands, coastlines, marine environmen­ts, and endangered species, including a goal of creating 60 national parks by 2035.

The central government has been laying the groundwork for national parks for over a decade, approving establishm­ent of a national park management office in 2008, which launched nine pilots in 2015. Two more pilots were added in 2019, and many were declared operationa­l last year. These areas were chosen based on a sweeping national ecosystem mapping project led by Ouyang Zhiyun at the China Academy of Sciences that drew from 100,000 field surveys and 200,000 satellite images to map China’s ecosystems on six indicators.

“I was speaking with some scientists based in the US and elsewhere outside China, and they remarked it’s the kind of ambitious, data-focused project that pretty much only China can pull off,” Rudy D’alessandro, the US National Parks Services’ internatio­nal cooperatio­n specialist, said at a public forum at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson Center last year.

China’s protected areas are experienci­ng ongoing reorganiza­tion from 13 to just three classifica­tions: national parks, nature reserves, and natural parks. National parks, the crown jewels of China’s protected areas, now have their own dedicated National Park Service. “They are trying to do what America did in 100 years, but in ten years,” Jonathan Jarvis, former director of the US National Parks Service and a consultant to China’s largest national park, Sanjiangyu­an, in the northweste­rn Qinghai province, said in a 2019 conversati­on with news site Pandaily.

Some have likened Sanjiangyu­an to the first national parks in America, with Associated Press calling it “China’s Yellowston­e.” However, while there are no people who currently live in Yellowston­e, there are 64,000 people who live in Sanjiangyu­an, which is roughly the size of Texas.

One of the biggest decisions facing each park is whether to relocate their human population­s. Environmen­tal philosophe­r Fan Yangcheng, associate professor at Beijing Forestry University, writes in a 2021 paper that the Usmodeled idea of national parks should be “transplant­ed into the third world” with caution. She points out that America’s earliest national parks were emptied of people at gunpoint. Yellowston­e forcefully relocated the Shoshone, Lakota, Crow, Blackfoot, Flathead, Bannok, and Nez Perce Peoples within its borders. In 1877, a conflict between the park authoritie­s and Shoshone residents killed as many as 300 people.

Fan suggests that Chinese national parks should instead be conceived of as controlled ecosystems where

human population­s live in symbiosis with nature. Relocation­s should be conducted on the principles of informed consent, participat­ion, and sufficienc­y, if at all.

While possible relocation­s from core conservati­on zones are written into the government’s 2035 plans as “ecological migration,” and China has its own track record of heavyhande­d forced relocation­s to reach political goals, some administra­tors have reassured the public that it will not be a strategy taken lightly.

In Momoge, Ranger Zou notes that while relocating humans would be good for conservati­on, the amount of compensati­on necessary to make it appealing for residents to willingly move is prohibitiv­e.

In Shandong province on the east coast, where the Changdao Marine Ecological Civilizati­onal Pilot Zone is an official candidate for a marine national park, the average household income from the fishing industry is 400,000 to 500,000 RMB (over five times the national average), making it difficult for the local government to grant potential relocatees a similar standard of living.

In 2018, Zhang Shanning, deputy director of the Northeast Tiger and Leopard National Park, told China News that relocation­s are “only one option, not a preferred option or a necessary one,” and “never one size fits all.” The park has the most residents of any national park, numbering 93,000 people. “Migration will only be considered when people and tigers are incompatib­le,” said Zhang.

The Hainan Rainforest National Park in China’s southernmo­st province, created to protect China’s last remaining large swath of ancient tropical rainforest not transforme­d into monocultur­e, is home to the island’s endemic Hainan gibbon.

Only 30 are estimated to remain.

The area is also populated by 30,400 humans, many of whom are ethnic Li people, who have lived on the island for thousands of years.

When Changjiang county party secretary Huang Jincheng received instructio­ns to relocate 3,181 residents living in 13 villages in Wangxia township, he penned an official proposal to the Hainan Provincial People’s Congress to not relocate the residents, stating that “there are many problems in the implementa­tion of ecological migration, such as residents’ attachment to their homeland, the difficulty of land allocation in new areas, lack of income opportunit­ies in new areas, and difficulty of integratin­g into the new environmen­t.”

The People’s Congress accepted Huang’s proposal, and Wangxia has instead been transforme­d into a cultural tourism project around Li culture, preserving the villages for folk song and dance performanc­es for tourists. Meanwhile, Huang notes that a policy in which all children are guaranteed free enrollment, food, housing, and medical expenses at the county’s ethnic middle schools is driving natural depopulati­on of the villages as young people leave for towns and cities.

However, not all counties in Hainan are following Huang’s model. Baisha county relocated 498 people at the beginning of this year, and Wuzhishan city is in discussion­s with residents to relocate 491 people.

In cases where people are allowed to remain, industry must typically move outside of the park’s bounds. This is no easy feat: In 2016, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection (now the Ministry of Ecology and

year in order to preserve grazing areas for the deer that tigers and leopards feed on, or else face a fine. The cost of buying industrial cattle feed is so high that many are reportedly selling their livestock.

While the protection of core conservati­on zones is paramount to preserving China’s key ecosystems for future generation­s, administra­tors face the challenge of how to reemploy locals. The most obvious options are employing them within the park administra­tion and encouragin­g job creation through the tourism industry. The growing Chinese middle class and paying about 2,000 RMB per month. However, the salary for rangers is still only a fraction of average household incomes, which still rely more on yak grazing and harvesting caterpilla­r fungus.

Sanjiangyu­an is home to Valley of the Cats, the first franchise within a Chinese national park, where domestic and internatio­nal tourists are taken on safaris to spot snow leopards. Managed by locals under the guidance of the Chinese NGO Shanshui Conservati­on Center, 100 percent of the proceeds for transporta­tion and homestays go to the local community.

British conservati­onist Terry Townshend, who helped develop the community tourism project, wrote on his online blog in 2019 that among the early visitors were Scottish couple Graeme and Moira Wallace, who flew 10,000 kilometers to spend their 40th wedding anniversar­y there, and were elated to encounter a snow leopard 160 meters from their vehicle. However, Townshend concluded that the “standard of accommodat­ion, food, and toilets mean that this type of tourism is only for the adventurou­s traveler.”

At the same time, the entrance fee and costs of visiting a park are prohibitiv­e for average Chinese people. “If most people can’t afford to visit national parks, the parks will lose their educationa­l and recreation­al meaning,” wrote a team of researcher­s led by Linghong Kong of Global Environmen­t Institute in a 2018 paper. They cited Potatso National Park, whose admission fee of 258 RMB was equal to roughly 1 percent of the national median after-tax annual income of 27,540 RMB in 2020 (this proportion to income would be equal to 350 USD in the US).

The Changbaish­an Nature Reserve of southeaste­rn Jilin employs 1,000 locals as rangers, shuttle drivers, and staff—many of them are former forest farm employees, now charged with protecting the forests, albeit on precarious contract pay.

Nearby, snowy slopes have become home to China’s premier ski resorts, leading the 60,000 locals of the town of Erdao Baihe to open hotels, restaurant­s, and convenienc­e stores, also finding employment in a bottling plant for the reserve’s spring water. Wang Shaoxian, director of the reserve’s Academy of Sciences, expects the site will soon make it onto the expanding roster of national parks.

“If we become a national park, our territory will expand. Protection comes

 ??  ?? A resident of a national reserve drives a motorcycle through the wetland to herd horses in Baicheng, Jilin province
A resident of a national reserve drives a motorcycle through the wetland to herd horses in Baicheng, Jilin province
 ??  ?? Cranes and other water birds are protected species in Jilin's Momoge and Xianghai wetland nature reserves
Cranes and other water birds are protected species in Jilin's Momoge and Xianghai wetland nature reserves
 ??  ?? Sanjiangyu­an National Park hires locals, many of them herders, to watch for poaching and other harmful activities
Sanjiangyu­an National Park hires locals, many of them herders, to watch for poaching and other harmful activities
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 ??  ?? Offering jobs as “ecological caretakers” is one way that nature reserves compensate locals for the loss of their land
Offering jobs as “ecological caretakers” is one way that nature reserves compensate locals for the loss of their land

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