Pilot projects for experimental construction of
ecological provinces are paving the way for China to achieve its
target of establishing an environmentally friendly
society.
Mao Rubai, chairman of the Environment Resources
Committee of the National People's Congress, made the remark at the
second China (International) Forum on Environment and Development,
sponsored by the All-China Environment Federation
yesterday.
He said: "In recent years, China has launched a series
of activities to promote environmental improvement in some model
provinces, counties, cities and areas, and honored their
significant achievements in ecological conservation and
environmental protection."
The award winners include 232 ecological conservation
areas, 178 environmental-friendly counties, and some 60 national
environmental model cities and districts.
"To date, China has named nine provinces as
experimental ecological provinces to honor their commitment to
improving the ecological environment, at a time when the ecological
environment is fragile," said Mao, adding that the situation had
not been relieved, amid continued soil erosion, expanded deserts
and shrinking grasslands.
The nine provinces include East China's
Jiangsu,
Zhejiang, Anhui, Shandong, and Fujian provinces, South China's
Hainan Province, Northeast China's Heilongjiang and Jilin
provinces, and North China's Hebei Province.
Pilot experimental projects aimed at shifting the
traditional economic development mode and constantly improving the
ecological environment have been carried out in the nine provinces,
according to Mao.
In a bid to establish a new socialist countryside, a
countryside environment protection project, aimed at giving a
facelift to current suburban areas, has been launched in the nine
provinces.
"The pilot experimental projects are vital to
sustainable development and are expected to cause a sharp and
positive turnaround in the current suburban environment," Mao
noted.
Sources from the State Environmental Protection
Administration said that hefty investment has been poured into the
experimental projects in the nine provinces.
Taking Hebei as an example, the latest province to be
listed in the nine, total investment for improving the province's
ecological environment will skyrocket to 418.8 billion yuan
(US$52.35 billion) by 2030.
Officials from the Hebei Environmental Protection
Bureau pledged the investment dedicated to ecological conservation
would ensure that 60 per cent of its surface water and 45.5 per
cent of its air quality will meet national standards, and the
afforestation rate will hit 26 per cent by 2010.
Energy
efficiency urged
Mao also pointed out that the energy consumption per
unit of gross domestic product (GDP) in China is seven times that
of Japan and six times that of the United States.
The recycled economy has been booming in some regions
to enhance energy efficiency, and has "actively transferred the
traditional economic development mode of high-consumption,
high-pollution and low-efficiency in the nine
provinces."
More pilot projects for promoting the recycled economy
and new legislation systems associated with it are in the
pipeline.
(China Daily June 19, 2006)
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