China Daily

Lawmakers call for protecting Qilian Mountains

- By MA JINGNA in Lanzhou and WANG KEJU in Beijing Contact the writers at wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

National lawmakers are calling for more effective ecological and environmen­tal protection of the Qilian Mountains — a vital natural shield in western China — including the use of advanced technology.

Yang Weijun, a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress and also Party secretary of Zhangye in Gansu province, said that over the past few years, authoritie­s have comprehens­ively rectified environmen­tal issues in the mountains. About three-quarters of the Qilian Mountains National Nature Reserve is in the city.

The mountains straddle the border between Gansu and Qinghai provinces. The nature reserve was designated a national protected site in 1988, but hundreds of mines in the area and various constructi­on projects took a toll on the environmen­t.

Thanks to the restoratio­n of the mountains’ environmen­t and greater efforts to protect wild animals and plants, many protected and vulnerable wild animals, such as snow leopards, goose-throated antelopes and white-lipped deer, have been frequently sighted in recent years, Yang said.

The city has also relocated all farmers, herdsmen and one-third of its residents who were living in the core area of the mountains to a new zone and helped them find jobs in an effort to ease the pressure on the environmen­t, he added.

Scientific research and the adoption of advanced technology are key to the restoratio­n of the mountains’ ecology, said Wang Tao, also an NPC deputy from Gansu and a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Northwest Institute of Eco-Environmen­t and Resources.

Wang said a research center led by the institute was set up last year to focus on ecosystem restoratio­n, water resource management and the ecological management of the mountains under the impact of global climate change.

The center has combined fundamenta­l and applied research to conduct environmen­tal monitoring and assessment, providing support for the creation of a Qilian Mountains national park, he added.

To better protect the mountain range, Wang said, it’s necessary to give full play to remote sensing observatio­ns to promote large-scale, rapid and dynamic monitoring and establish a comprehens­ive ecological assessment system in the reserve.

A data-sharing mechanism should be pushed forward to create a database of the mountains’ environmen­t, which would support its protection in a scientific and targeted way, he added.

 ?? FAN PEISHEN / XINHUA ?? Workers plant trees by the Heihe River, a river originatin­g from the Qilian Mountains, in Zhangye, Gansu province, last year.
FAN PEISHEN / XINHUA Workers plant trees by the Heihe River, a river originatin­g from the Qilian Mountains, in Zhangye, Gansu province, last year.

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