|
Foreword
China's Tibet Autonomous Region is situated on the
main body of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. With high altitude, unique
geographical features and rich wildlife, water and mineral resources, it
has been called the "Roof of the World" and the "Third Pole of the Earth."
It is not only the "source of rivers" and the "ecological source" for the
areas in South and Southeast Asia, but is also the"starter" and
"regulating area" of the climate of China and indeed of the Eastern
Hemisphere as a whole.
The Chinese government attaches great importance to
ecological improvement and environmental protection in Tibet. It has made
tremendous efforts to strengthen ecological improvement and environmental
protection work in Tibet, promote the sustainable development of its
economy and society, and improve the quality of life of the people of its
various ethnic groups. For over half a century, ecological improvement and
environmental protection in Tibet, as an important part of the effort to
modernize Tibet, has,together with economic development, social progress
and enhancement of people's living standards, pressed forward and made
great achievements. It would help clarify some people's misunderstanding
concerning Tibet's eco-environmental problem and enhance their
understanding of Tibet to review the progress of the ecological
improvement and environmental protection work in Tibet,to present the
status of this undertaking, and to envisage the prospects of sustainable
development for the region.
I.
Progress of the Ecological Improvement and Environmental Protection Work
in Tibet
The Tibet Autonomous Region is 1.22 million sq. km
in area, with an average altitude of well over 4,000 m above sea level. It
boasts a unique natural ecology and geographical environment. The climate
in Tibet turns gradually from being warm and moist to cold and dry from
its southeast toward its northwest. Ecologically, the changes are
manifested in belts from forest, bush, meadow and steppe to desert. The
complex and varied terrains and landforms as well as the unique type of
ecological system have created a natural paradise for biodiversity.
The old Tibet before the 1950s had long been under
the rule of feudal serfdom. The development level of its productive forces
was extremely low, and it was, by and large, in a state of passive
adaptation to natural conditions and one-way exploitation of natural
resources. It was absolutely impossible to discuss the objective law of
the ecological environment of Tibet, or to talk about ecological
improvement and environmental protection. From the latter half of the 19th
century, some foreign explorers and scientists conducted various surveys
and investigations on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. In the 1930s, Chinese
scientists also carried out some surveys and investigations there. But,
generally speaking, their knowledge of the unique natural eco-environment
of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau was incomplete and unsystematic.
It was after the peaceful liberation of Tibet that
ecological improvement and environmental protection started there, and
began to progress along with the modernization of Tibet.
-- The peaceful liberation initiated the process of
scientific understanding, voluntary protection and active improvement of
the ecological environment in Tibet. Shortly after the peaceful liberation
of Tibet in 1951, in order to unveil the mysteries of the Qinghai-Tibet
Plateau and promote Tibet's social progress and development, the Central
People's Government organized the "Tibet Work Team of the Government
Administration Council" (on the basis of which the "Tibet Comprehensive
Exploration Team of the Chinese Academy of Sciences"was established in
1958), to explore and assess land, forest, pastureland, water conservancy
and mineral resources in Tibet. The work team put forward a proposal for
scientific development and utilization, which started the process of
scientific understanding,utilization and protection of the ecological
environment in Tibet.
At the same time, ecological improvement and
environmental protection work gradually unfolded, with the aim of
improving the subsistence conditions on the Tibet Plateau. The State sent
forestry specialists to explore parts of the Yarlungzangbo River Valley,
and carried out experiments in the cultivation of tree saplings and
afforestation at the July 1 Farm in the western suburbs of Lhasa, which
laid the foundation for large-scale afforestation and ecological
improvement in Tibet. After the implementation of the Democratic Reform in
1959, a mass voluntary tree-planting drive using local tree species as the
main breeds was launched in a big way in Tibet. Such afforestation efforts
enabled the people in Tibet to achieve a qualitative leap from the
centuries-old passive adaptation to natural conditions to remaking nature
on their own initiative.
After the founding of the People's Government of
the Tibet Autonomous Region in September 1965, ecological improvement and
environmental protection were put on government agenda and thus
organizationally guaranteed, along with the progress of work in all
spheres achieved by the people's democratic government. In 1975, the
Leading Group for Environmental Protection of the Tibet Autonomous Region
and its General Office were established. In 1983,the Urban and Rural
Construction and Environmental Protection Department under the government
of the Autonomous Region was established. Since then, the organizational
structure and administrative systems have kept improving, and ecological
improvement and environmental protection work in Tibet has gradually got
onto the track of sound development.
The comprehensive scientific surveys on the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau have helped people to learn about Tibet's natural
eco-environment in a more systematic and profound manner. As a
result,ecological improvement work in Tibet began to make substantial
headway. The Chinese Academy of Sciences formulated the "Comprehensive
Scientific Survey Plan for the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau for 1973-1980." In
1972, the Academy held the "Symposium on Scientific Survey in the Mt.
Qomolangma Area," the first ever, in Lanzhou. In the wake of this
symposium, all types of comprehensive or specialized academic conferences
in respect of the natural eco-environment of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
were held one after the other, accompanied by a large number of academic
achievements. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Comprehensive Scientific Survey
Series alone contains 31 titles in 42 volumes, amounting to a grand total
of some 17 million characters. These scientific achievements have provided
a scientific basis for making better use of natural resources in the
economic development of Tibet, and for continuous improvement of the human
living environment. In 1977, the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry
organized for the first time an all-round survey of the forestry resources
across Tibet. Since 1978, to meet the requirements of afforestation, some
50 sapling farms have been set up in various places, introducing,
naturalizing and cultivating scores of tree breeds suitable for Tibet.
-- The reform and opening-up has enabled ecological
improvement and environmental protection work in Tibet to progress in a
law-governed manner. After the reform and opening-up policy was adopted
some two decades ago, as Tibet has grown more modern, greater attention
has been given to the Autonomous Region's ecological improvement and
environmental protection, which is progressing steadily in a law-governed
manner. In the 13 years from 1982 to 1994, the Standing Committee of the
People's Congress of the Tibet Autonomous Region,and the People's
Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region and its various departments
enacted and implemented more than 30 relevant local regulations,
governmental standardization documents, and departmental rules and
regulations, which formed a relatively systematic local legal regime
concerning environmental protection.As far as the contents were concerned,
they included comprehensive regulations concerning ecological and
environmental protection, such as the "Regulations for Environmental
Protection in the Tibet Autonomous Region", as well as special regulations
for different areas of ecological and environmental protection, such as
land management, mineral resources administration, forest protection,
grassland protection and control, water and soil conservation, wild
animals protection, nature reserves administration, and pollution
treatment. These rules and regulations covered almost all areas in
ecological and environmental protection, so that there were laws to go by
in all these spheres.
The State has directly invested in comprehensive
agricultural development projects on the middle reaches of the "three
rivers" (the Yarlungzangbo, Lhasa and Nyangqu rivers), with the emphasis
on the improvement of the ecological environment, and has achieved
noticeable ecological results. With regard to tree-planting and
grass-growing on barren mountains, hillsides and beaches, the government
has enacted a special policy featuring "the lasting and inheritable
practice of whoever reclaims the land shall be entitled to operate and get
benefit from it." This has encouraged local people to plant trees and grow
grass, and guaranteed the rights and interests due to them in
eco-environmental amelioration.Investigations on the current status of the
ecological environment in the areas of land, wild fauna and flora, plant,
insect and wetland resources have been successfully carried out.
Eco-environment researchers have begun to monitor and trace the impact of
human activities on the ecological environment, carried out various
projects such as dynamic remote-sensing monitoring of the eco-environment
for comprehensive agricultural development on the middle reaches of the
"three rivers", overall survey of the grain pollution caused by residual
organochlorine, and investigation on the sources of industrial pollution,
and have proposed relevant policies and measures for pollution prevention
and control.
Publicity and education concerning ecological
improvement and environmental protection have been widely carried out,
striking deep roots in the hearts of the people. The media, including
radio,television, newspapers and the Internet, have given wide coverage to
afforestation, wild animals and plants preservation, and environmental
protection. Important commemorative events, such as World Wetlands Day,
Arbor Day, Earth Day, World Environment Day and World Desertification and
Drought Control Day have drawn the attention of people from all walks of
life in Tibet. Lessons on ecological improvement and environmental
protection are given in schools, and an effort to establish "green
schools" is in full swing.
-- Concern from the Central Government and support
from people throughout the country have enabled Tibet to embark upon a new
phase in its ecological improvement and environmental protection
undertakings. The Central Government called the Third Forum on Work in
Tibet in 1994, and made an important decision to extend the support of the
whole nation to Tibet under the care of the Central Government, which has
given a powerful impetus to accelerating the ecological improvement and
environmental protection work there.
Since the 1990s, the State Environmental Protection
Administration has organized environmental protection departments
throughout the country to support Tibet in enhancing its environmental
protection capability, helped build environment monitoring stations in the
Autonomous Region, in the cities of Lhasa and Xigaze and in Qamdo
Prefecture, helped train large numbers of technical and administrative
personnel in the field of environmental protection, and helped formulate
an ecological protection and pollution control plan. In the "National Plan
for Eco-environmental Improvement" and the "National Program for
Eco-environmental Protection" formulated by the State Council respectively
in 1998 and 2000, great attention has been paid to ecological improvement
and environmental protection in Tibet, and a separate plan has been drawn
up to make the freeze thawing zone on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau one of the
country's eight major areas for ecological improvement, complete with the
proposition of a suite of explicit tasks and principles for work in this
regard. On the basis of this, the People's Government of the Tibet
Autonomous Region formulated the "Eco-environmental Improvement Plan of
the Tibet Autonomous Region" in 2000, which has provided an overall
program and arrangement for Tibet's eco-environmental improvement. After
the State decided to adopt the great western development strategy, the
Central Government held the Fourth Forum on Work in Tibet in 2001, and
further increased investment in ecological improvement projects in Tibet.
From the perspective of attaining sustainable development in Tibet, it has
been expressly stipulated that tourism and green agriculture be developed
as the pillar industries for promoting economic growth in Tibet.
II. Ecological
Improvement and Biodiversity Protection
The positive efforts made by the Tibet Autonomous
Region for ecological improvement and biodiversity protection in the past
five decades or more have been crowned with signal success.
-- Natural grassland is rationally utilized and the
active grassland ecological protection is effective. Tibet contains one of
the five largest pasturelands in China. It has 82.07 million hectares of
natural grassland, representing about 21% of the total natural grassland
of the country and 68.11% of the total land area of Tibet. According to
the first national survey of grassland resources, the variety of grassland
in Tibet ranks first among all provinces and autonomous regions. Of the 18
types of grassland in the country, Tibet has 17. To protect the grassland
ecology is an important link in preserving a complete and orderly chain of
ecology on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Though the grassland area in Tibet is very large,
its carrying capacity is low. Grassland overload was not significant in
the old days in Tibet, because of stagnant population growth, frequent
natural calamities, and massive human and livestock deaths in times of
snowstorms and other natural disasters. Since the peaceful liberation of
Tibet, the average life-span of the local population has expanded
remarkably, the population has kept increasing, and as a result the issue
of insufficient grass to feed the ever-growing livestock population has
begun to appear. Consequently, to keep an ecological balance on the
pastureland has gradually become a prominent problem. To ease the
contradictions between human beings and farm animals and between grass
supply and farm animals, Tibet has taken a succession of measures to
strengthen the rational utilization and ecological protection of natural
grassland. First, emphasis has been placed on fencing and building water
conservancy projects on natural grassland, and raising both the output
level of grassland and its carrying capacity per unit area. Secondly, a
pasture responsibility system has been implemented. In line with the
principle of limiting the number of grazing animals by the size of the
pasture, rotation grazing periods, rotation grazing areas and "no-grazing
areas" have been designated. Efforts have been made to increase the market
availability rate of the livestock and to effectively protect natural
pastures by strictly prohibiting over-grazing. Thirdly, man-made grassland
is being promoted so as to ease the pressure brought to bear on natural
grassland by the ever-growing livestock population. Fourthly, efforts are
being intensified to prevent or control hazards caused by mice, insects
and poisonous weeds, and to maintain the natural ecological balance of the
grassland by utilizing scientific means, and artificial and biological
technologies. Fifthly, to enhance grassland amelioration in the pastoral
areas, change the nomadic way of production, speed up economic development
in pastoral areas and improve herdsmen's living standards, projects to
construct grassland in the pastoral areas, build permanent settlements for
roving herdsmen, and restore and improve natural grassland have been
launched since 2001. These measures not only have steadily raised the
income of farmers and herdsmen and enhanced their living standards, but
also ensured the sound development of the grassland ecology.
-- Protecting natural forest resources, carrying
out afforestation and improving the ecological environment. Tibet boasts
7.17 million ha. of forest, and the stocking volume has reached 2.091
billion cu m. Tibet has the largest primitive forest in China. To protect
Tibet's ecological environment, the government exercises a "felling by
quota" policy, and strictly controls the scale of tree-felling in forests.
The annual felling amount for commercial purpose is limited to 150,000 cu
m. Simultaneously, a rotation system is in place for lumbering bases so as
to help restore vegetation. A project for the protection of natural forest
resources on the upper reaches of the Yangtze River in Tibet, with a total
area of 31,000 sq. km, has been implemented in the three counties of
Jomda, Gonjo and Markam that have a weighty bearing on the ecology of the
lower Yangtze valley. In 28 counties along the upper reaches of the
Jinsha, Lancang and Nujiang rivers and the catchment area of the
Yarlungzangbo River, where the hazards of sandstorm and soil erosion are
serious, a project to restore farmland to forest is being undertaken,
under which 52,000 ha. of cultivated land will be restored to forest and
trees planted on 53,000 ha. of barren mountains and wasteland. By 2002,
some 6,700 ha. of cultivated land had been restored to forest and 6,700
ha. of barren mountains and wasteland afforested.The government is also
striving to promote the development of energy substitutes and fuel
forests, and popularize solar energy in order to protect natural bush
vegetation.
It has become the conscious action of the people in
Tibet to join afforestation efforts. The government of the Tibet
Autonomous Region has formulated the "Forestation Plan of the Tibet
Autonomous Region" and the "Opinions on Acceleration of Afforestation."
The people of the whole region are making efforts by starting with the
improvement of their living environments, first of all by greening their
courtyards, streets and urban environment in general, and eventually
building green belts in river catchment areas where human activities are
concentrated, and along major highways. The results have been remarkable.
According to a survey, over the past 50-plus years some 70,000 ha. of land
have been afforested in Tibet, 90 million trees have been planted beside
villages, houses, roads and waterways, and 1.5 million cashtrees have been
grown.
Afforestation and ecological projects have been
launched steadily. Implementation of the key projects, such as the
afforestation project in Lhasa and its outskirts, the construction of the
shelter-forest system of the Yarlungzangbo River, the pilot project of the
Yangtze River shelter-forest system in Markam and the pilot project for
controlling sand by afforestation in Xigaze,has, to a great extent,
improved the natural eco-environment of those localities. Since 1996, the
State has begun to build a shelter-forest system along the upper and
middle reaches of the Yangtze River. By 2000, it had invested more than
3.7 million yuan in the project, actively supporting Tibet in building
man-made forests and sealing off mountainous areas to facilitate
afforestation as appropriate to local conditions. The afforested area has
topped 13,000 ha., which, as a result, has played a positive role in
improving local residents' working and living conditions. Following
implementation of the project for the construction of the shelter-forest
system of the Yarlungzangbo River, which is part of the key "three rivers"
agricultural development undertaking, a man-made forest belt measuring
several hundred km from Xigaze to Zetang on the upper reaches of the
Yarlungzangbo River has been formed. Now, a new spectacular scene,the belt
plays a positive role in conserving water and topsoil along the
Yarlungzangbo River.
Due to the effective protection of natural forest
resources and afforestation, the forest coverage in Tibet has kept
growing. It has grown from less than 1% in the 1950s to 5.93% today, and
has played a positive role in improving the Autonomous Region's ecological
environment. According to reports from relevant monitoring departments,
due to the increase in man-made vegetation,the number of sandstorm days
has decreased noticeably in Tibet. Currently, it is 32 days fewer in
Lhasa, 34 days fewer in Xigaze and 32 days fewer in Zetang, than 30 years
ago.
-- Comprehensive control of soil erosion has
brought noticeable achievements. The Tibet Plateau belongs to the alpine
cold meadow and steppe landscape, which is characterized by poor water and
soil conservation and vulnerability to serious soil erosion. Over the past
50 years, soil erosion in Tibet has been effectively controlled by
afforestation and construction of water conservancy projects. In recent
years in particular, the State and the Tibet Autonomous Region have
increased their investment in soil erosion control, which has yielded
highly desirable results. By the end of 2001, the State had invested more
than 36.8 million yuan in Tibet,built 53,000 ha. of forests to conserve
water and topsoil, grown grass on 67,000 ha., harnessed soil erosion on
1,166 sq. km, and launched a comprehensive control project in the Radoigou
small catchment area in Quxu County, Lhasa, and implemented comprehensive
control projects for conserving water and topsoil in Gyangze and Nyemo
counties. Simultaneously, the Tibet Autonomous Region has formulated the
"Plan for Conservation of Water and Topsoil in Tibet" and several other
plans in respect of water and soil conservation and soil erosion control,
promulgated the "Measures of Administration for Water and Soil
Conservation Projects in the Tibet Autonomous Region," and made
prevention, supervision and protection the top priority of the water and
soil conservation work, in order to prevent new soil erosion caused by
human activities. To enable the comprehensive control of soil erosion to
be carried out in a more scientific way, the Tibet Autonomous Region
launched, in 2001, the construction of a water and soil conservation
monitoring network with an investment of more than 60 million yuan to
provide overall monitoring for soil erosion across Tibet.
-- Achievements have been made in desertification
prevention and control. Sandstorms have afflicted Tibet throughout its
history. Now, as a result of the expansion of the hole in the ozone layer
caused by global warming, Tibet has been facing problems of rising
snowlines,dried-up lakes, and deteriorated grassland in recent years. In
some areas in Tibet, pastureland has suffered a natural deterioration, and
some of it has been reduced to sand and stone. To control pastureland
deterioration and desertification, Tibet has begun to improve the
environment of its rivers, with the emphasis on improving small river
valleys and the desertification of deteriorated pastureland. With the goal
of establishing a relatively good ecological system of forestry and
grassland, Tibet has adopted measures consisting of afforestation, aerial
sowing and closing off hillsides to facilitate afforestation. It has
planted trees, bushes and grass on a large scale near rivers and in areas
that have been hit most seriously by pastureland deterioration and
desertification. Projects to protect the natural forests and wetlands, and
to reconvert farmland into forest or pasture have been carried out on the
upper reaches of the Yangtze River. In 2002, the goal was to reconvert
some 13,000 ha. of farmland into forest. The Central Government provided
10 million yuan as subsidy for seedlings, and 15 million kg of grain and
two million yuan as allowance for families of farmers and herdsmen whose
farmland had been restored to forest. Trees were planted in the vicinity
of Lhasa, and in important agricultural areas forest shelter belts were
built around the fields to reduce soil erosion by sand. These measures
have brought the ever-expanding desertification threat under control.
-- Great progress has been
made in protection of biodiversity. Tibet is one of the most typically
biodiverse regions in the world.It is an important gene pool for the
biodiversity of the globe. At present, there are over 9,600 wild plants in
Tibet, 39 of which are listed in the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora and are under special State
protection as rare and endangered species. There are 798 species of
vertebrates and nearly 4,000 species of insects in Tibet, 125 of which are
under special State protection, accounting for more than one third of the
wild animals under special State protection.Approximately 600 species of
higher plants and more than 200 species of terrestrial vertebrates are
endemic to the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
Over the past 50-plus years, the Central Government
and the regional government of Tibet have conducted extensive surveys on
Tibet's biological resources. They have worked out scientific plans and
programs for the protection of wild animals and plants. They have also
adopted a sequence of measures for effective protection of the rare and
endangered species. In accordance with the relevant State laws and
regulations, the Tibet Autonomous Region has established forest law
enforcement organs and the Tibet Armed Police Forestry Contingent. They
have conducted the "Hohxil Action Number One" and other special campaigns
in the border areas of Qinghai, Xinjiang and Tibet to protect the Tibetan
antelope and other rare animals. These campaigns have dealt a heavy blow
to poachers and curbed law-violation activities that have done damage to
wild animal resources. Meanwhile, the State has invested millions of yuan
each year in infrastructure facilities for forest security and forest fire
prevention in Tibet. In 2002, the State set aside 3.66 million yuan from
its national debt revenue for a special project aimed at cracking down on
poachers of Tibetan antelopes. It has also strengthened publicity on the
protection of wild animals. Now people in Tibet are highly conscious of
the importance of protecting wild animals, and the once rampant hunting of
Tibetan antelopes has been brought under control.
Over the past 50 years or more, not one species in
Tibet has suffered extinction. Biodiversity is effectively maintained, and
biological types are continuously enriched. Red deer, generally considered
by the international animal research community to have vanished in the
20th century, were discovered again in Tibet in the 1990s, and their
numbers are increasing. As Tibet opens wider to the outside world,
non-native creatures such as carp, crucian carp, eel and loach,
high-productivity and quality cattle, sheep, pigs, chicken, ducks, as well
as corn, watermelons and vegetables have been introduced from the inland
areas to Tibet, where they are thriving today.
-- Great achievements have been made in the
establishment of nature reserves. Establishing nature reserves is an
important method used by Tibet to strengthen ecological improvement and
environmental protection work and implement the strategy of sustainable
development. Since the 1980s, Tibet has established more than 70 nature
reserves of different types. Of these, three are on the national level
(four more national-level nature reserves are being planned) and 15 are on
the autonomous region (provincial) level. The total area of the 18 nature
reserves is 401,000 sq. km, accounting for 33.4% of the land area of Tibet
and 30.8% of the total area of China's nature reserves. In addition,
prefectures and prefecture-level cities in Tibet have established over 50
nature reserves of the corresponding level. A rationally distributed
nature protection network of different types is basically in place. In
light of the general program and requirements of the State, the People's
Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region is carrying out the "Development
Plan for Nature Reserves in the Tibet Autonomous Region for 1996-2010." It
is expected that 28 new nature reserves at or above the autonomous region
level will be established before 2010. By then, all types of nature
reserves other than sea and seashore ecosystem ones will be found in
Tibet.
In order to restore the natural ecosystem, human
activities such as economic development are strictly limited in the
established nature reserves. As a result, the ecological environment in
most of the nature reserves has become stable and the prospects are quite
good. Breeding grounds, habitats and important ecosystems for rare and
endangered species, important wetlands for migratory birds, as well as the
natural landscapes, geological sites and biological sites of scientific
importance are now well protected. All the 125 wild animals, 39 wild
plants and typical geological features in Tibet that are on the State
protection list are well preserved in the established nature reserves. The
Tibet Autonomous Region has more than six million ha of wetland,
accounting for about 4.9% of Tibet's total land area and ranking first in
China. Its alpine wetlands are unique in the world. According to
monitoring by the relevant departments, the number of both wild animals
and plants in the nature reserves is obviously increasing, and the total
reserves of wild animal resources have increased by upwards of 30%. Rare
animals that had not been seen for many years have returned to their
habitats. In the Changtang Nature Reserve, monitoring in the past few
years has revealed that the numbers of wild animals such as Tibetan wild
donkey, argali and antelope have increased to differing degrees. The
number of Tibetan antelopes has reached 40,000 to 50,000 in the Nyima
central reserve. After a nature reserve for black-necked cranes was
established on the middle reaches of the Yarlungzangbo River, the number
of black-necked cranes wintering there has increased each year, accounting
for about 80% of the earth's total number of black-necked cranes.
III. Ecological Improvement and Environmental
Protection amid Economic Development
The ecosystem in Tibet is extremely fragile, and
the ability to resist disturbance and regenerate is weak. Once the
ecosystem is damaged, it is hard to restore it for a long period of time.
For more than 50 years Tibet has adhered to the strategy of sustainable
development, ensuring the close combination and coordinated development of
ecological improvement, environmental protection and economic
construction. While the economy develops rapidly and the people's living
standards are constantly rising, the ecological environment is being
effectively protected. In accordance with the latest monitoring findings,
the environment of water and the atmosphere in Tibet are basically
unpolluted. The average annual concentration of suspended particles in the
atmosphere of Tibet's cities is between 193 and 268 per cu m. No major
environmental pollution accident has occurred in Tibet, and most of its
major rivers and lakes are in a primordial state.
-- Environmental protection
and ecological improvement are synchronized with agricultural production
and development.In Tibet, the natural conditions for agriculture are poor,
infrastructure is weak, grain productivity is low and the capability to
withstand natural disasters is low. Therefore, it is necessary to
strengthen agricultural infrastructure construction, transform low- and
medium-yield fields and improve the level of the agricultural ecosystem
for agricultural production and development. With this aim in mind, the
government of the Tibet Autonomous Region has endeavored to raise grain
yield by improving the eco-environment for agricultural development. The
government is helping farmers change their traditional cultivation habits
of letting land lie idle after harvest -- a centuries-old practice known
as "white fallow", which is detrimental to water and soil conservation.
Rotation of grain and grass is adopted to increase the fertility of the
soil and its ability to conserve water. While attention is paid to
farmland water conservancy construction, a forest shelter network is being
built to protect farmland from being eroded by sandstorms. As a result of
persistent efforts, the rate of land usage in the major agricultural
producers in central Tibet has increased greatly, and the level of soil
erosion has declined markedly. Natural conditions like water and heat,
which are fundamental to the growth of farm produce, have been improved.In
2000, surveys by experts found that the comprehensive eco-environment
appraisal index of this area has gone up by 1.5 percentage points from 10
years ago. The improvement of the ecological environment has steadily
increased agricultural productivity. By 2001, agriculture in Tibet had had
bumper harvests for 14 years in a row. The total grain output had reached
982,500 tons, enough to make Tibet basically self-sufficient.
The State has invested a large sum of money on a
series of comprehensive agricultural development projects in Tibet. It is
making sure that while land areas are expanded, the ecological environment
is improved at the same time. In the major construction projects, such as
the comprehensive agricultural development project on the middle reaches
of the "three rivers" with an investment of 1.2 billion yuan from the
Central Government,environmental protection and ecological improvement are
made key parts of the projects. Monitoring of the ecological environment
incomprehensive agricultural development in the "three rivers" area in the
past 10 years indicates that, due to an organic combination of biological
and engineering measures, both the types and rate of land utilization and
the acreage of man-made vegetation in the area have increased markedly.
Desertification and soil erosion have been effectively checked, and the
comprehensive index of the eco-environment quality has been raised by one
to three grades. Comprehensive agricultural development has not only
reaped significant economic benefits, but also resulted in good social and
ecological benefits.
-- Industrial projects are selected carefully, and
pollution prevention and control are strengthened. Industry was not
developed at all in Tibet until after the region's peaceful liberation.
Even today, there are few industrial enterprises in Tibet, and so
industrial pollution is not much of a problem. In order to reduce the bad
effects caused to the ecological environment by industrial development,
the government of the Tibet Autonomous Region has adhered to the principle
of placing equal emphasis on both industrial development and environmental
protection. As industries are developed in the region, Tibet has made
every effort to ensure that while they bring about economic profits they
have social and environmental benefits as well. No industrial project is
to be launched just because of its envisaged economic benefit or just
because it will fill a gap in the field. To effectively combat pollution,
the government has adopted a series of pollution-prevention measures to
ensure that the development of modern industry does not damage the
ecological environment. First, industrial pollution is dealt with through
industrial restructuring, product-mix adjustment and technological
transformation. For instance, the Lhasa Leather Factory has imported
environmental-protection facilities along with advanced technologies and
equipment from Germany. The Lhasa Brewery, which used to be a big
polluter, has spent more than four million yuan on equipment to treat
industrial sewage as part of its technological transformation efforts. As
a result, its sewage discharge has met the specified standard. Second,
supervision and management of the environment has been tightened.
Rectification has been carried out in respect of enterprises that fail to
meet the requirements for pollutant discharge. In accordance with the
guiding principle of "opening big enterprises and shutting down small
ones" for industrial restructuring, six vertical-kiln cement production
lines in Lhasa proper, which used to be serious polluters, have been shut
down. Enterprises causing serious pollution are barred from production,
and outdated technologies and equipment prohibited by the State have been
winnowed out.
-- Strengthening evaluation and management of
the impact of resources development and major infrastructure construction
projects on the ecological environment. A policy is implemented ensuring
that no new construction, reconstruction and expansion projects shall be
authorized unless an evaluation of their impact on the environment has
been conducted. This policy and the system of the "three simultaneouses"
(pollution prevention facilities are designed, built and commissioned
simultaneously with the main project) are strictly enforced. More than 80%
of medium-sized and large construction projects have gone through
evaluation of their impact on the ecological environment. The Norbusa and
Shangkasam chromite mining projects include eco-environmental protection
as a key task in resources development. With respect to the hydropower
station at Yamzhoyumco Lake, which has attracted the attention of the
world, full consideration was given to the protection of the ecological
environment, starting from the decision to build the station to its design
and construction. Since this hydropower station was put into operation,
electricity generation has not caused the water level in the lake to drop,
which would have harmed the natural eco-environment of the lake.
-- Much attention has been paid to the
comprehensive treatment of the ecological environment in urban areas in
order to improve people's living environment in areas with dense
population. The comprehensive management of the ecological environment in
cities and towns has always been stressed in ecological improvement and
environmental protection work in Tibet. To guarantee the quality of the
atmospheric environment, Tibet is actively popularizing the use of
non-polluting energy sources in cities and towns, and phasing out fuels
such as faggot, ox dung, coal and oil currently being commonly used by
local residents. It encourages people to adopt natural gas as fuel for
daily use. By 2001, the number of liquefied petroleum gas users in Lhasa
and Xigaze had increased to 44,600 households, accounting for 83% of their
combined total. At the same time, Tibet is actively using clean energy
sources like water, geothermal, solar and wind energies. A pattern
featuring water energy as the main energy source complemented by other
types of energies has initially been formed, and has been a great help to
the protection of the ecological environment. The amount of solar energy
used in Tibet each year is equivalent to that provided by 130,000 tons of
standard coal. In Lhasa and Xigaze, 1,693.6 ha. of land are covered by
trees or grass, and 47.48 ha. are public green areas. The rate of green
coverage in established districts is 23.5%. Construction of plumbing and
treatment of sewage has been pushed ahead in urban areas, and 679,460 m of
water supply pipes and 392,770 m of sewage pipes have been laid. The
government has invested 51.2794 million yuan in building Lhasa's garbage
disposal plants, and garbage disposal facilities for other cities are
being actively planned.
-- Devoting major efforts to the development of
tourism and other specialty industries that are beneficial to the
protection of the ecological environment. Developing specialty industries
with relatively little impact on the ecological environment has always
been an important policy in accelerating the economic development of
Tibet. With its unique natural geographical and cultural environments,
Tibet enjoys a nature-endowed advantage in developing tourism and other
tertiary industries. In 1996, the People's Government of the Tibet
Autonomous Region adopted the "Decision on Speeding Up the Development of
Tourism", and put tourism -- one of the Autonomous Region's pillar
industries -- in a prominent place and developed it vigorously. In 2001,
Tibet played host to 686,100 domestic and foreign tourists, its earnings
from tourism totaling 750 million yuan and its earning of foreign exchange
reaching 46.38 million US dollars. Some 6,506 people are directly involved
in the tourist industry, while more than 30,000 people are indirectly
involved. The status of tourism in Tibet's economy is rising. Although
tourism pollutes the environment to only a very small extent, the local
government has paid much attention to problems arising from the damage to
the ecosystem and from environmental pollution in the development of
tourism. Tourism and environmental protection departments are actively
taking measures to collect, classify and dispose of garbage left in scenic
spots to prevent pollution of the eco-environment. Garbage bins have even
been set up at the harsh Mt. Qomolangma mountaineering headquarters.
Garbage left by climbers and tourists is collected, removed and disposed
of periodically.
IV. Building an
Ecology-Friendly Railway Line -- the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
There was no highway in
Tibet before its peaceful liberation. Economic and social contacts in
Tibet and its contacts with the outside world depended solely on human
power and draft animals, as well as post roads. Now, a transportation
network consisting of 24,000 km of highways, a dozen air routes and more
than 1,000 km of pipelines has been completed. Still, Tibet remains the
only autonomous region (province) in China inaccessible by rail.
Transportation has long been a bottleneck holding back the economic and
social development of Tibet and hindering the improvement of the people's
living standards. Building the Qinghai-Tibet Railway has been the
long-cherished wish of people of all ethnic groups in Tibet. It is not
only essential for strengthening links between Tibet and the hinterland,
accelerating the economic and social development of Tibet and improving
the local people's material and cultural well-being, but is also of great
significance for enhancing ethnic unity and common prosperity.
On June 29, 2001, with the
approval of the Central Government, construction of the section between
Golmud and Lhasa began as part of the second phase of the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway project. This railway line will be 1,142 km long, and will involve
an investmentof 26.21 billion yuan. It will take six years to complete.
Making the Qinghai-Tibet Railway an ecology-friendly railway line was the
goal set at the time the project was appraised.
-- During the initial research period, an
appraisal of the impact of the railway line on the environment was
carefully conducted. In the initial period of the project, relevant
departments chose several aspects that would affect the ecological
environment, and conducted intensive research. On the basis of this
research and with arrangement by the Chinese government, specialists from
various fields carried out in-depth on-the-spot investigations, and
conducted a sound scientific appraisal of the impact of the railway
building on Tibet's ecology and environment in light of the requirements
of the environmental protection, water and soil conservation, and wild
animals protection laws, and those of the "National Plan for
Eco-environmental Improvement", and the "National Program for
Eco-environmental Protection." They compiled a report and some other
documents, offering their appraisals of the environmental impacts,
together with proposals for protection of the ecological environment. In
light of the requirements of the appraisal, a guideline for the
construction of the project was worked out, i.e., "giving priority to
prevention and protection and attaching equal importance to both
development and protection." The result of the appraisal of the ecological
environment was used to guide the designing and construction of the
railway line and its environmental management. Some 1.2 billion yuan will
be spent on environmental protection facilities for the Qinghai-Tibet
Railway, a record sum in this aspect for rail construction in China.
-- At the design stage of this railway line,
protection of the ecological environment was the deciding factor in the
plan for the project. Protection of the ecological environment has been an
essential concern in the design of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway. The routes
were selected so that they would keep away from the major habitats of wild
animals. The original design of the railway would have it passing through
the black-necked crane nature reserve on the middle reaches of the
Yarlungzangbo River. After many discussions,the designers decided to
select a circuitous route via Yangbajain,to avoid disturbing the birds.
But if avoidance was impossible, such as the section cutting through the
Hohxil, Qumar and Soga nature reserves, the planners would compare several
designs, and put forward protection measures to minimize disturbance to
the nature reserves. Based on the investigations and studies of the habits
and migration patterns of the wild animals along the railway line, the
planners established 25 passageways for wild creatures at different
sections of the line. In designing bridges and tunnels, the designers gave
full consideration to the needs ofwildlife crossing the railway line. At
many spots, special bridges were planned to provide passageways for
migrating wildlife so that the normal life of these animals would be
guaranteed as far as possible. Hohxil is one of the habitats of the
Tibetan antelope, which faces the danger of extinction and is under the
State's first-grade protection. In June and July each year, they form
groups and travel long distances to Zhoine and Taiyang lakes to breed. The
builders of the railway line stopped work for four days,withdrew workers
and equipment from the construction site and removed the colored flags
that would alert and frighten the Tibetan antelopes. The animals
eventually passed through the construction site without being disturbed.
To prevent damage to grasslands and wetlands, the planners designed many
special bridges. The total length of bridges built for this railway line
in Tibet alone would reach 13 km.
When completed, the stations along the
Qinghai-Tibet Railway will use environment-friendly energy sources such as
electricity, solar energy and wind energy for heating. Garbage at the
stations will be collected for batch treatment. Domestic sewage, after
being treated to meet the State's discharge standard, will be
used,whenever possible, to water green spaces. The passenger cars will be
sealed. Garbage on the trains will be collected in plastic bags which will
be handed over to stations along the plateau for batch treatment. To suit
the characteristics of the plateau, the central station management mode
will be adopted, with seven central stations established along the line.
Each of these stations will be totally responsible for the trains' running
and maintenance in an area within a radius of 80 km. Wherever possible,
remote automatic control and mechanized maintenance will be adopted to
reduce the number of both the organizations and their staff on the
plateau, thereby giving maximum protection to the natural eco-environment
of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
-- Reducing the adverse impact of the railway
construction on the ecological environment to the minimum. To achieve this
goal, all the construction units have signed a responsibility pledge for
eco-environmental protection with the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Construction
Planning Office. The Office also requires all construction units to
formulate or improve rules and regulations for protecting the ecological
environment, and establish environmental protection sections run by
full-time or part-time administrators. It is also imperative for the
construction units to take specific scientific measures to protect the
ecological environment; and their construction plans must meet the
requirements for environmental protection. Competent governmental
administration departments of land, environmental protection and water
conservancy and relevant units responsible for design, supervision and
construction must work together to decide on the sites for taking and
discharging dirt and placing building materials such as sand and stone.
They should determine, according to the availability of sunlight and
hardness of ice, the appropriate distance between those sites and the
railway roadbeds,as well as the traffic routes for workers and vehicles.
Construction and relevant activities should be done within the designated
areas to keep the permafrost stable. The headwaters and wetlands along the
railway line are to be specially protected to avoid desertification in the
headwaters areas, shrinkage of wetlands, deterioration of grasslands and
water pollution that might be caused by the construction. Attention is to
be paid to the protection and regeneration of ground vegetation. In places
difficult for plants to grow and on the construction sites and
transportation routes, the turf should be preserved and replanted in other
places section by section, to be moved back to cover the slopes of the
roadbeds and construction sites, so as to minimize the loss of ground
vegetation. Where natural conditions are relatively good, grass seeds
suitable for plateau areas should be carefully selected and planted with
appropriate means of cultivation to restore as much as possible the ground
vegetation that existed before the railway construction. Where the natural
conditions are good enough, turf to be cultivated by manpower should be
tried out, supported by the techniques of spray sowing and plastic film
mulching. In the Tuotuo River area, where the Yangtze River originates,
test-planting of grass on plateau roadbeds has been successful in the
first stage. The railway builders will take all measures to meet the
environmental requirements of the railway construction.
A key point in building the Qinghai-Tibet Railway
is to protect the ecological environment along the railway line. All units
involved in the construction are making great efforts in this respect. The
China Railway No. 14 Engineering Bureau, for instance,has 13 key technical
problems now undergoing scientific research, of which half concern
environmental protection. There are six supervisors in this bureau who are
in charge of eco-environmental protection on the railway construction
sites. They are responsible for ensuring that the camp sites, work-site
access roads and passageways, quarries, and sites for supplying dirt and
digging trenches take up as little space as possible. They are also
responsible for supervising accommodation facilities to ensure that the
delicate plateau vegetation is properly protected.
-- Taking effective
measures to minimize the pollution that the railway construction might
cause to the plateau's ecological environment. To achieve this goal, the
construction units have tried to use high-efficiency, low-noise and
low-pollution equipment. They have tried to adopt more mechanized ways of
construction and use as few administrators and workers as possible on the
work sites. Whenever possible, prefabricated concrete components are
carried to the construction sites and assembled there. In order to avoid
the pollution caused by slurry around bridge-building sites, they use
dry-boring by rotary drills where possible. The Office requires that all
waste water from construction and camp sites be processed to meet the
corresponding sewage treatment standard before discharge. Solid waste from
construction sites and trash from campsites must be sorted out and
recycled whenever possible. Waste and trash that cannot be degraded should
be moved to appropriate places for batch treatment.
-- Strengthening supervision and inspection of
environmental protection to meet the protection requirements. An
environmental protection supervision system for a whole railway line was
first adopted for the Qinghai-Tibet Railway. The Office entrusted a third
party to supervise the environmental protection work all along the line
during the whole period of the railway construction. To strengthen such
supervision and inspection work, the State Environmental Protection
Administration and the Ministry of Railways jointly issued the
"Notification on Strengthening the Supervision and Management of the
Eco-environment in the Building of the Qinghai-Tibet Railway", setting out
specific requirements for the environmental protection and supervision
work during the construction period. The State Environmental Protection
Administration, the Ministry of Railways and other government departments
concerned have repeatedly sent inspection groups to supervise the
implementation of these environmental protection measures. Any violation
of the environmental protection regulations is severely punished.
With the concerted efforts of all concerned it is
justifiable to believe that the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, as a plateau
railway upto the environmental protection standard, will truly benefit the
people of all ethnic groups in Tibet.
V. The Strategic
Choice for Sustainable Development
For the past 50 years or so, benefiting from the
concern of the Central Government and support from the whole nation,
people of all ethnic groups in Tibet have pulled their full weight to give
an earth-shaking new look to Tibet, and have made achievements in
ecological improvement and environmental protection that have attracted
attention worldwide. People in Tibet today live and work in peace not only
with a booming economy and developing society, but also with their
landscape kept beautiful, their rivers kept clean, their animal species
kept diversified, and their vegetation kept lush. Tibet has truly become a
"Shangri-La."
Rapidly shaking off its traditional backwardness
and quickening its steps toward modernization are the natural requirements
for the progress and development of Tibet society and the fervent wish of
all the ethnic groups in Tibet. Located on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
Tibet has a peculiar geographical environment and a fragile ecosystem.
Therefore, it is an important part of Tibet's progress to modernization
and a strategic choice for sustainable development that Tibet should
protect the regenerative capacity of its natural resources, improve the
quality of its ecological environment, preserve the integrity and
self-adjustment ability of its natural ecosystem, and ensure the safety of
the ecosystem and the harmonious unity and coordinated development of
Tibet's economy, society and ecosystem.
Ecological improvement and environmental protection
in Tibet cannot be achieved if development steps falter, but nor should we
attain short-term economic development at the cost of the ecological
environment. We can only follow the law of social development, attach
equal importance to both economic development and eco-environmental
protection, giving attention to protection in the process of development
and seeking development in the process of protection, and implement the
strategy of sustainable development. Ecological improvement and
environmental protection should be done in an active, thrusting and
dynamic manner, and not in a passive, conservative and closed-door way. We
cannot refuse any interaction between man and natural eco-environment on
the excuse of preserving the fragile primitive natural state, because this
will hamper the economic and social development and the improvement of
people's living standard in Tibet.
The relationship between the exploration and
utilization of natural resources and eco-environmental protection must be
handled properly in the course of the modernization of Tibet, so as to
promote changes in the mode of economic growth. It is clear from past
experience in Tibet that the exploration and utilization of natural
resources must follow the laws of nature, taking both long-term and
overall interests into consideration, so as to avoid being too eager for
quick success and instant benefits to the extent of over-burdening the
ecological environment. A scientific attitude and methodology must be
adopted in exploring natural resources and protecting the ecological
environment. Natural resources that are not to be explored and used should
be strictly protected, while the exploration and utilization of needed
resources should be done scientifically with a definite goal, to prevent
any unwanted impact on the ecological functions. Only in this way can the
natural resources in Tibet be utilized rationally and scientifically, and
can economic development and eco-environmental improvement be achieved
simultaneously.
Tibet's ecological improvement and environmental
protection, just as its economic and social development, have a vital
bearing not only on the fundamental interests of the people of all ethnic
groups in Tibet but also on the common interests of the whole nation.
People of all ethnic groups in Tibet are the major motivators and direct
participants in the ecological improvement and environmental protection
work in Tibet. They are also the main beneficiaries of a well-preserved
ecological environment. Carrying forward such work will benefit both the
State and the people for generations to come. Starting from the
fundamental interests of the people in Tibet and the fundamental demand of
the people of all ethnic groups across China for common prosperity, over
the past five decades and more the Chinese Central Government and the
regional government of Tibet, in a spirit of being highly responsible for
posterity and the world as a whole, have made tremendous efforts to
promote and develop the ecological improvement and environmental
protection work in Tibet, and have made achievements that have captured
worldwide attention.
The Dalai clique and the international anti-China
forces shut their eyes to the progress in the ecological improvement and
environmental protection work in Tibet. They have spread rumors all over
the world that the Chinese government is "destroying Tibet's ecological
environment", "plundering Tibet's natural resources" and "depriving the
Tibetan people of their right to subsistence", and so on and so forth, in
order to mislead world public opinion and deface the image of China.
Camouflaging themselves with pretensions of concern about
eco-environmental protection in Tibet, they want really nothing but to
hamper the social progress and modernization of Tibet and to prepare
public opinion for their political aim of restoring the backward feudal
serfdom in Tibet and splitting the Chinese nation.
It is true that there are still many problems in
Tibet's ecological improvement and environmental protection efforts. As
the whole global ecosystem is deteriorating, the fragile ecology in Tibet
is particularly affected. Mud-rock flows, landslides, soil erosion,
snowstorms and other natural calamities occur frequently in Tibet and
desertification is threatening the region's eco-environment, compounded by
man-made damage to the ecological environment as Tibet's economy develops.
All these things have attracted much attention from the Central Government
and the regional government of Tibet. In order to ensure the permanent
stability of the ecological environment and natural resources and to guard
against possible new threats to them, the regional government of Tibet,
supported by the Central Government, has set up and put into practice
since 2001 a mammoth plan for ecological improvement and environmental
protection. From now until the mid-21st century, more than 22 billion yuan
will be invested in over 160 eco-environmental protection projects aimed
at steadily improving the ecosystem in Tibet. There is no doubt that the
people in Tibet will create an even more beautiful environment and an even
better life for themselves in the course of their future development.
Information Office of the State Council of the People's
Republic of China
March 2003, Beijing
|