" it will take 300 years to turn back China’s advancing deserts at the current rate of progress."
Out of time
China Is Building The Great Green Wall To Hold Back The Desert
19
October, 2015
In
1978, China began planting The Great Green Wall to create a
2,800-mile long green belt in an effort to tame the expanding Gobi
Desert. Over the last few decades, more than 66 billion trees have
been planted in northern China. The Wall is planned to be completed
by 2050 and is expected
to increase forest cover across China from 5% to 15%. By
2050, more than 100 billion trees will occupy a 2,800-mile belt, 1.6
million square miles – covering about a tenth of the country in
greenery. Chinese officials claim that by 2050 much of the arid land
can be restored to a productive and sustainable state.
China
has seen 1,400 square miles of grassland overtaken every year by the
Gobi Desert. The encroaching Gobi, about half a million square miles
in area, has swallowed up entire villages and small cities and
continues to cause air pollution problems in Beijing and elsewhere
while racking up some $50 billion a year in economic losses. The Wall
will have a belt with sand-tolerant vegetation arranged in
checkerboard patterns in order to stabilize the sand dunes. A
6-foot-wide gravel platform will hold sand down and encourage a soil
crust to form. The trees will serve as a windbreak from dust storms.
According
to a study published recently in the journal Nature
Climate Change, the
total amount of carbon stored in all living biomass above the soil
has increased globally by almost 4 billion tons since 2003,
with China contributing in a notable way to the increase.
“The increase in vegetation primarily came from a lucky combination of environmental and economic factors and massive tree-planting projects in China,” said Liu Yi, the study’s lead author and a remote sensing scientist from the Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science at the University of New South Wales in Australia.
A
2014 study, led by Dr Minghong Tan from the Chinese Academy of
Sciences, found that Chinese government’s ambitious plan is
working. “The
results show that in The Great Green Wall region, vegetation has
greatly improved, while it varied dramatically outside The Great
Green Wall region. In most places in the study area, greenness
continued to increase between 2000 and 2010. In North China as a
whole, we think the environment is getting well. From the results, we
infer that the
implementation of The Great Green Wall programme has effectively
decreased dust storm intensity by improving the vegetation
conditions,” the
researchers wrote.
Tree cover in the North, the Northeast and the Northwest area has increased from 5% to 12% since 1977. That’s a commendable feat. But still more than one quarter of China is either covered by desert or is land that is suffering desertification adversely affecting the lives of over 400 million people. Since 2003, 450,000 people in Inner Mongolia have been moved off land to prevent it degrading further. Is this a sign that The Great Green Wall is failing to beat the sand?
Opinion
is, therefore, divided about The Wall’s success and advisability.
Hong
Jiang of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, says, “China’s
aggressive attitude towards nature, especially planting trees where
they do not grow naturally, will not ultimately work. Instead
of controlling nature, we need to follow nature.”
David
Shankman of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, says, “The
ecological issues are complex, and long-term results are not clear.
What is the mortality rate of planted trees? What happens when they
die? And how do these trees affect grass and shrubs, which in general
are more resistant to drought and more effective at erosion control?”
A
senior Chinese official, Liu Tuo, who leads China’s efforts to
tackle the problem, said in 2011 that it
will take 300 years to turn back China’s advancing deserts at the
current rate of progress.
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