Since 1998, China has reduced its annual lumber output by 19.9
million cubic meters in an effort to protect its diminishing and
vulnerable forests.
Five years ago, when floods devastated the Yangtze River area,
claiming a huge number of lives and generating huge financial
losses, the government launched its new policy on lumbering
reduction in the Yangtze and Yellow River valleys and in the
northeastern provinces.
By
2000, all wood-cutting activities had been suspended in the Yangtze
River and Yellow River areas, involving over 30 million hectares of
land.
Lumbering companies in the northeast are ordered to reduce 41
percent of output this year, according to local officials.
The northeastern region produces one-third of the country's wood
output, and the central government wants the region to gradually
reduce lumbering in phases.
(Xinhua News Agency May 30, 2003)
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