Special Report: China's war on snow havoc
BEIJING, March 13 (Xinhua) -- The worst winter weather in five decades
damaged 340 million mu (22.7 million hectares), or nearly13 percent of China's
forests, as of Feb. 25, a senior forestry official said on Thursday.
"The severe damage has resulted in an obvious decline in biodiversity and
may lead to frequent floods," said Lei Jiafu, deputy director of the State
Forestry Administration (SFA).
The damage would also increase the possibility of forest fires as well as
forest and wildlife disease outbreaks, he said, adding that recent forest fires
had confirmed these concerns.
The storms left large areas of forests strewn with flammable debris, such
as dead branches.
Experts estimated that the damage would also cause forests to absorb 45
million tons less carbon dioxide each year, Lei said in an interview posted on
the central government's Web site (www.gov.cn).
The disaster had also caused losses of 101.4 billion yuan (14.3billion U.S.
dollars) to the forestry sector, he said.
The official noted that forest farmers in south China suffered heavy losses
as they ran most of the collectively-owned cash forests under contract. These
areas were hardest-hit by the snow and ice.
"The side effects [of the storms] will be prolonged and recovery will take
at least five to twenty years," Lei said.
He pledged that the SFA would promote government-subsidized forestry
insurance to hedge against future disasters and would raise relief funds for the
recovery of forestry production.