Chen Dezhen, from the village of Wugucheng in Wuqi County in
Yan'an, Northwest China's Shaanxi Province, receives more than
5,000 kilograms of food every year from the government free of
charge.
The food supply is in return for Chen's returning more than 4
hectares of his family's cultivated land back into forest land.
"The foodstuff is enough for the nine people in my family," Chen
said. He added that the government also pays him more than 1,200
yuan (US$145) each year.
Chen's family now has less than 1.3 hectares of cultivated land,
where they plant cash crops such as potatoes.
He
also raises 15 sheep, which he said bring him some extra
income.
"With the move to plant trees on cultivated land, the mountains
here have turned green and the rivers have become clean and we are
now living in an environment that is far better than before," he
said.
Like Chen, other farmers in Wuqi County on the Loess Plateau now
all get food supplies and payment from the government for their
efforts in turning cultivated land back into forest.
According to county head Xue Zhanhai, local farmers traditionally
cultivated large areas of land but harvested small amounts and used
to herd sheep freely.
This way of farming led to the area of cultivated land in the
county reaching more than 133,000 hectares and the number of sheep
in the county surpassing 500,000 in the early 1980s.
The local ecosystem then became degraded and the farmers were stuck
in poverty, Xue said.
Since the county government began to encourage farmers to stop
cropping on cultivated land and plant trees instead in 1997, more
than 100,000 hectares of cultivated land have been turned into
forest, he said.
The county now has just under 180,000 sheep and they are all kept
in pens, Xue added.
(China Daily July 28, 2003)
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