[The report adds to the rising
concerns of scientists, ordinary Chinese and some officials that China ’s decades of rapid economic
growth have caused huge and possibly irreversible damage to the environment. In
recent years, there have been public outcries over air, water and soil pollution.
Some Chinese leaders have acknowledged the need to protect environmental
resources, but many agencies and officials still view economic growth as their
top priority.]
a
The
report, based on 18 months of research, says “the primary driver for the
reduced area of coastal wetlands is the large-scale and fast conversion and
land reclamations of coastal wetlands.”
A farmer with a flock of geese in
country's coastal wetlands are vanishing. Credit
|
BEIJING — Coastal wetlands in China have vanished at an alarming rate
because of the country’s economic development, and current economic plans could
diminish them to below the minimum needed for “ecological security,” including
fresh water, fishery products and flood control, according to a report released
Monday by Chinese scientists and an American research center.
The
report adds to the rising concerns of scientists, ordinary Chinese and some
officials that China ’s decades of rapid economic
growth have caused huge and possibly irreversible damage to the environment. In
recent years, there have been public outcries over air, water and soil pollution.
Some Chinese leaders have acknowledged the need to protect environmental
resources, but many agencies and officials still view economic growth as their
top priority.
“The
life-support system is degenerating,” Lei Guangchun, a dean at Beijing Forestry University who was a lead researcher on
the study, said in an interview on Monday. “Wetlands are the core of
biodiversity along the coastlines. Now they are disappearing.”
Dr. Lei said 60 percent of China ’s natural coastline had
disappeared because of development.
Henry M. Paulson Jr., chairman of the Paulson Institute and a
former United States Treasury secretary, said in a written statement that “it
is time to rethink the economic development model of the past and take decisive
actions toward a more sustainable economic transition.”
Among the chief political
questions in China is whether President Xi
Jinping is serious about transforming the nation’s infrastructure-driven
economic model to a more sustainable one, and whether he has the power to do
so. This is expected to be a main topic at a plenary session this month of the Communist Party’s
Central Committee, which plans to discuss the 13th Five-Year Plan for economic
development.
Last year, the State Council,
which is China’s cabinet, and the State Forestry Administration announced that China had to ensure that by 2020
coastal wetlands did not fall below 131 million acres — the minimum necessary
for ecological security. But plans to reclaim land from the sea and other
projects endanger that goal, the report says.
“Sea
reclamation is deemed as the quickest and cheapest way to increase land supply
in China ’s eastern coastal areas,” the
report says. It adds that “huge economic returns from reclamation have prompted
local governments to ‘bypass’ regulations issued by the central government.”
The report points to systemic problems with environmental
conservation efforts. It says that “the legal system and effective legal basis
remains inadequate to conserve coastal wetlands in China ” and that conservation efforts
“are still confronted with conflicts of multiple institutions and mechanisms.”
This last point became evident at a news conference about the
report on Monday that central government officials from various agencies
attended. Several officials thanked the researchers but said that their
agencies did not bear sole responsibility for protecting coastal wetlands.
The
report calls for the central government to form a more systematic approach to
wetlands conservation, an effort that now involves the overlapping authorities
of 12 agencies and 11 coastal administrative areas.
The report identifies about 180 priority areas for conservation
along the east coast, as well as 11 of the most important habitats for
migratory birds.
Zhang Zhengwang, a professor of
zoology at Beijing Normal University who worked on the report, said
Chinese coastal wetlands lay on the most important of nine global routes for
migratory birds and were a critical resting point. “China ’s wetlands are the only gas
station, so to speak, along the way,” he said in an interview. “If they cannot
feed here, they will die.”