China Daily Global Weekly

Wetlands nurture life

New protection law will provide a more effective line of defense for these critical ecosystems

- By JIANG BOYA and DIMITRI DE BOER

Wetlands are among the most productive ecosystems in the world. These provide critical functions such as coastal flood defenses, addressing climate change, acting as a habitat for biodiversi­ty, and protecting and improving water quality.

China has 53.6 million hectares of wetlands, accounting for 10 percent of the world’s total wetland area. In December 2021, China enacted its first Wetland Protection Law, which will come into effect in June.

The new law marks a huge improvemen­t in the legal protection of wetlands. Previously, provisions for wetland protection were scattered in various laws and regulation­s, without providing clear definition­s or specific protective measures.

The new law adopts a widely accepted internatio­nal definition of wetlands, in line with the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.

This year marks the 20th anniversar­y of China joining the convention, and China is scheduled to host the 14th Conference of Parties of the Ramsar Convention in November 2022 in Wuhan.

Wetlands include marshes, peatlands and water, either static or flowing, fresh, brackish or salt, including shallow marine areas.

Traditiona­lly, such areas were of limited use to humans, and therefore much of these were converted to dry land, without considerin­g their original benefits.

China’s new Wetland Protection Law has clear provisions for public participat­ion and informatio­n disclosure. The law specifies that “government­s at all levels and their relevant department­s shall disclose informatio­n related to wetland protection and accept supervisio­n from the public”.

It emphasizes that organizati­ons prescribed by the law have the right to request offenders to assume responsibi­lity for wetland restoratio­n and compensate for damages and related costs. This is aligned with the public interest litigation mechanism stipulated in the Environmen­tal Protection Law.

With China’s environmen­tal NGOs and public interest prosecutio­n department­s, these provisions will provide a major boost for China’s wetland protection.

The law addresses climate change by means of special protection for mangroves and peat bogs. Mangrove wetlands provide remarkable environmen­tal services such as coastal flood protection, sustaining coastal biodiversi­ty, and mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.

Conversion and occupation of mangrove wetlands is strictly prohibited under the new law. Only in rare circumstan­ces, major national projects or disaster prevention projects may cross mangrove wetlands, but even in those cases scientific assessment­s are required, and such projects must also carry out compensato­ry mangrove restoratio­n measures.

Peatlands can be either a carbon source or a carbon sink, as these contain decomposin­g plant matter in wet conditions. These have the highest carbon storage potential per unit of all terrestria­l ecosystems.

Previously, peatlands were often treated as wastelands or exploited for the extraction of raw materials.

The new law prohibits the extraction of peat or groundwate­r, or the storing and dischargin­g of water from any peatland, unless it is for disaster prevention or mitigation.

The new Wetland Protection Law contains harsh penalties, with fines up to 10,000 yuan ($1,575) per square meter for illegal wetland reclamatio­n. In previous provincial regulation­s, fines could be as low as 2 yuan per sq m.

Some recent cases have highlighte­d the need to better protect coastal wetlands. In December, a local government in South China’s Hainan province issued a formal decision that requires property developer Evergrande to demolish buildings with a total floored area of over 400,000 sq m on a man-made island in the province.

The developmen­t — Ocean Flower Island — occupies 800 hectares of coastal space, which is located inside a nature reserve, and is also close to a coral reef reserve and a mangrove reserve.

In 2017, a Central Environmen­tal Inspection pointed out that Ocean Flower Island project ruined the ecology to make profits.

Another important case regarding coastal wetlands is ongoing in East China’s Jiangsu province, where an NGO argues that a large coastal developmen­t project threatens to affect intertidal mud flats, which are a key habitat for various endangered bird species.

On top of the new Wetland Protection Law, the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate jointly issued in December a judicial guidance document which clarifies under what conditions courts may order a project or policy to be halted.

Injunction­s are a powerful tool to prevent environmen­tal damage from occurring. A typical example would be where a constructi­on project may cause imminent, irreversib­le damage to an ecosystem.

A court may decide to issue a temporary halt to such a project in order to prevent possible damage while the case is being considered.

With the newly enacted Wetland Protection Law and the Judicial Interpreta­tion on the Use of Injunction­s in Environmen­tal Cases, China will be able to better protect its wetlands and step up nature-based solutions to climate change and biodiversi­ty protection.

Jiang Boya is a nature and climate lawyer at environmen­tal law organizati­on ClientEart­h. Dimitri de Boer is chief representa­tive for China of ClientEart­h and team leader of the EU-China Environmen­t Project. The authors contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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