Two Chinese cities have been elected to the prestigious ranks of
the Global 500 Roll of Honor for their outstanding contributions to
the protection of the environment, the U.N. Environment Program
(UNEP) announced Wednesday in Nairobi, capital of Kenya.
Aohanqi achieved a near miracle through "desert warfare"
Aohanqi County of Chifeng City in northeastern China's Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region has achieved a near miracle by holding
back the seemingly relentless march of the deserts through a
vigorous, 30-year strategy of "desert warfare" using trees and
grasslands, said UNEP in a statement.
Up
to date, forest coverage in the city has reached 43.5 percent and
8,000 hectares of grasslands have been planted. Soil erosion losses
have more than halved from over 5,000 tons per square kilometer a
year and movable sand dunes have been reduced from 38,000 hectares
to just 6,000 hectares.
Meanwhile, food production in the country has risen eight-fold
since the 1970s and gross domestic product (GDP) has climbed ten-
fold over the same period.
The remarkable success of Aohanqi offers a beacon of hope to other
places around the globe where desertification threatens people with
poverty and water shortages, said the statement.
"Fighting the spread of deserts and erosion is one of the most
formidable challenges facing the world today. The fact that a
community has not only halted the spread of a desert, but appears
to be overwhelming these forces of environmental degradation is an
achievement for which the people of Aohanqi, Chifeng City, should
be rightly proud," said UNEP Executive Director Klaus Toepfer.
Another Chinese city that has won the Global 500 award is Shenzhen
in the southern part of the country, which will also host this
year's World Environment Day from June 4 to 5.
Shenzhen has won the award for its impressive achievement of
marrying rapid and astonishing economic growth with environmental
protection, said UNEP, adding that the actions taken by the city to
secure environmental standards across industry and business are
legion.
Since being established in 1980 as China's first Special Economic
Zone, the municipal council has spent 3.8 billion yuan ( about 463
million U.S. dollars) on environment, passed 38 local environmental
laws and increased green coverage in the center by 45 percent.
The city has also vetoed 3,619 projects that have failed to meet
environmental requirements, with its air quality now meeting
environmental standards on 98.4 percent of days and drinking water
meeting national standards, said the statement.
"All this and more has been achieved against the backdrop of
economic growth that has seen the city's annual GDP increase by
over 30 per cent in 21 years," said Toepfer.
"I
look forward to learning at first-hand how this city has put itself
on course towards the goal of sustainable development in this year
of the World Summit on Sustainable Development taking place in
Johannesburg between August 26 and September 4," he added.
Other winners
Joining the two Chinese cities as winners of the Global Award are
five environmental groups from Angola, Ecuador, Kazakhstan, the
Philippines and the United States.
Her Royal Highness Princess Basma bint Ali of Jordan is this year's
only individual winner who is acknowledged for her outstanding
awareness raising of environmental issues in the Middle East, said
UNEP.
Since the inception of the award in 1987, 727 individuals and
organizations have been honored by UNEP, among them 25 Chinese
individuals and organizations.
And this year's award will be presented to winners in Shenzhen on
June 4 as part of the World Environment Day celebrations.
(People’s Daily May 16, 2002)
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