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China Focus: From a single tree to a forest -- Saihanba's story

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China Focus: From a single tree to a forest -- Saihanba's story

2017-08-06 13:16

Xinhua Editor: Li Yahui

U755P886T1D268235F12DT20170806131650.jpg

File photo shows scenery of Saihanba in Weichang Manchu and Mongolian Autonomous County in Chengde, north China's Hebei Province. Saihanba is a combination of Chinese and Mongolian meaning "beautiful highlands". (Xinhua/Wang Long)

About 400 kilometers north of Beijing lies a large swathe of trees that is critically important to water and air quality in the capital.

It is an environmental shield which reduces sandstorms.

The Saihanba forest purifies 137 million cubic meters of water for Beijing-Tianjin area and can deliver half a million tons of oxygen, but more than half a century ago it was nothing more than a barren land.

Zhao Yunguo, director of the forest management office, pointed towards a tree, about 20 meters tall, and called it "a tree of merit."

"Fifty-six years ago, there was only one tree, this one. Without it, there would have been no Saihanba," Zhao said.

Saihanba is a combination of Chinese and Mongolian meaning "beautiful highlands". Until the Qing Dynasty (1616-1912), it was a royal hunting land.

When the dynasty was on its last legs, Emperor Tongzhi opened the land for lumber to make up for a state deficit. The area quickly turned into sterile land on the verge of a Mongolian desert.

Efforts to rehabilitate the land started in the 1960s. In October, 1961, a group of six arboriculturalists went on an expedition through the land and studied the possibility of growing trees there.

"They found this one tree, standing alone in the vast land. They literally went to hug the tree, and every one was in tears," said Zhao.

If one tree can survive here, so can millions of trees - such was people's hope with Saihanba. About 56 years later, hope turned into reality. The barren wasteland is now a vast forest of 7.5 hectares.

SEEDLINGS ON STONY GROUND

Planting trees at Saihanba, where temperatures could drop to minus 43 degrees, was a tricky proposition.

In the 1960s, young recruits planted 427 hectares of larches, but hardly any survived, less than eight percent.

"We used to truck in seedlings from northeastern China, and from the south, but it was hard for them to survive the local climate," said Yi Guizhi, a retired tree-planter.

People cultivated seedlings, and took care of them throughout the year. "We sowed the seeds in early spring, cared for them through summer and autumn, and properly protect them through the winter. The seedlings grew to have strong roots, and they were not tall, but rather stout," said Yi.

Over the years, trees in Saihanba survived some of the worst drought, frosts and pests.

"We used almost every known technique to keep the trees alive," said Wang Jianfeng, another veteran tree-planter.

"For some plants, we grow them on the land for two years, and put them in jars for two years for them to become strong enough, and then transplant them back to the land," he said.

Plantation efforts are not uncommon throughout China, but many were futile because of a lack of constant care.

In order to succeed, people at Saihanba were persistent. In 2012, about 6,000 hectares of stony land remained, where tree planting was extremely costly and hard.

"We never waited until there was enough money, or enough manpower. We decided it was the right thing to do, to turn the last piece of barren land green," said Liu Haiying, head of the forest management office.

In the last five years, the workers planted trees on 83 percent of the land. The rest of tree planting work will be finished next year, said Liu.

SKILL AND ART

Workers fell trees regularly to allow others to grow, leaving about 15 big trees for every hectare. They plant different types of trees to improve pest and disease resistance.

"Planting a tree to the soil is a skill, but preserving it for the long term is an art," said Zhang Xiangzhong, an official with the forest management office.

China has 200 million hectares of forest, but many are of low quality. "The key to good forestation is good management," said Zhang.

Saihanba has excellent management. Some of its standards have been adopted by other forests. There has never been a report of fire at Saihanba for 55 years. Local precipitation has increased by 60 millimeters compared to years before, and its micro-climate has been improved, experts said.

"The people of Saihanba have upheld a credo of turning the environment green. Their efforts are highly commendable, and such should be the way for other forest management staff to learn," said Shen Guofang, an academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/08-06/268235.shtml
 
.
China Focus: From a single tree to a forest -- Saihanba's story

2017-08-06 13:16

Xinhua Editor: Li Yahui

U755P886T1D268235F12DT20170806131650.jpg

File photo shows scenery of Saihanba in Weichang Manchu and Mongolian Autonomous County in Chengde, north China's Hebei Province. Saihanba is a combination of Chinese and Mongolian meaning "beautiful highlands". (Xinhua/Wang Long)

About 400 kilometers north of Beijing lies a large swathe of trees that is critically important to water and air quality in the capital.

It is an environmental shield which reduces sandstorms.

The Saihanba forest purifies 137 million cubic meters of water for Beijing-Tianjin area and can deliver half a million tons of oxygen, but more than half a century ago it was nothing more than a barren land.

Zhao Yunguo, director of the forest management office, pointed towards a tree, about 20 meters tall, and called it "a tree of merit."

"Fifty-six years ago, there was only one tree, this one. Without it, there would have been no Saihanba," Zhao said.

Saihanba is a combination of Chinese and Mongolian meaning "beautiful highlands". Until the Qing Dynasty (1616-1912), it was a royal hunting land.

When the dynasty was on its last legs, Emperor Tongzhi opened the land for lumber to make up for a state deficit. The area quickly turned into sterile land on the verge of a Mongolian desert.

Efforts to rehabilitate the land started in the 1960s. In October, 1961, a group of six arboriculturalists went on an expedition through the land and studied the possibility of growing trees there.

"They found this one tree, standing alone in the vast land. They literally went to hug the tree, and every one was in tears," said Zhao.

If one tree can survive here, so can millions of trees - such was people's hope with Saihanba. About 56 years later, hope turned into reality. The barren wasteland is now a vast forest of 7.5 hectares.

SEEDLINGS ON STONY GROUND

Planting trees at Saihanba, where temperatures could drop to minus 43 degrees, was a tricky proposition.

In the 1960s, young recruits planted 427 hectares of larches, but hardly any survived, less than eight percent.

"We used to truck in seedlings from northeastern China, and from the south, but it was hard for them to survive the local climate," said Yi Guizhi, a retired tree-planter.

People cultivated seedlings, and took care of them throughout the year. "We sowed the seeds in early spring, cared for them through summer and autumn, and properly protect them through the winter. The seedlings grew to have strong roots, and they were not tall, but rather stout," said Yi.

Over the years, trees in Saihanba survived some of the worst drought, frosts and pests.

"We used almost every known technique to keep the trees alive," said Wang Jianfeng, another veteran tree-planter.

"For some plants, we grow them on the land for two years, and put them in jars for two years for them to become strong enough, and then transplant them back to the land," he said.

Plantation efforts are not uncommon throughout China, but many were futile because of a lack of constant care.

In order to succeed, people at Saihanba were persistent. In 2012, about 6,000 hectares of stony land remained, where tree planting was extremely costly and hard.

"We never waited until there was enough money, or enough manpower. We decided it was the right thing to do, to turn the last piece of barren land green," said Liu Haiying, head of the forest management office.

In the last five years, the workers planted trees on 83 percent of the land. The rest of tree planting work will be finished next year, said Liu.

SKILL AND ART

Workers fell trees regularly to allow others to grow, leaving about 15 big trees for every hectare. They plant different types of trees to improve pest and disease resistance.

"Planting a tree to the soil is a skill, but preserving it for the long term is an art," said Zhang Xiangzhong, an official with the forest management office.

China has 200 million hectares of forest, but many are of low quality. "The key to good forestation is good management," said Zhang.

Saihanba has excellent management. Some of its standards have been adopted by other forests. There has never been a report of fire at Saihanba for 55 years. Local precipitation has increased by 60 millimeters compared to years before, and its micro-climate has been improved, experts said.

"The people of Saihanba have upheld a credo of turning the environment green. Their efforts are highly commendable, and such should be the way for other forest management staff to learn," said Shen Guofang, an academician of Chinese Academy of Engineering.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/08-06/268235.shtml
with seed bombing?
 
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China's Reforestation Efforts Successful, NASA Images Confirm

China has managed to reverse centuries-worth of deforestation, according to recently released NASA images, providing some inspiration and hope for other countries to do the same.

The country has been on a steady trend towards industrialization, which is often correlated with environmental degradation. Deforestation, pollution and natural resources depletion have resulted from China's rapid economic boom in the past four decades.

Many did not expect the environmental improvements that China was able to achieve but this was scientifically verified. Based on the images captured by NASA's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), it was revealed that 1.6 percent of the total land surface of China became heavily forested in a span of only ten years from 2000 to 2010.

The reforestation rate is higher compared to the 0.38 percent deforestation rate for the same period
. Around 160,000 square kilometers or 61,000 square miles of land area was covered.

Analyses of the NASA MODIS images were carried out and published by Dr. Andres Viña and colleagues from the University of Michigan. They confirmed that China's reforestation program is working effectively in line with the country's climate change mitigation agenda.


Tthe scientists were reportedly impressed by the positive results of the China's reforestation efforts. The progress that China made in environmental protection and preservation was significant, according to them.

"Our results are very positive for China," Viña said in a EurekAlert report. "If you look at China in isolation, its program is working effectively and contributing to carbon sequestration in accordance to its agenda for climate change mitigation. But on the other hand, China is not in a vacuum."

He pointed out that China's reforestation success could be detrimental to other countries because the huge country is not importing timber products from other countries. This will create a demand economic pressure on countries that export timber.

The Christian Science Monitor website published a similar story, emphasizing that the analysis of the satellite data should not be limited to only one nation. In a globalized community of nations, the bigger picture must always be taken into consideration.

These analyses were published recently in Science Advances.


<iframe src="
" width="640" height="360" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p><a href="
">China Reforestation Overview</a> from <a href="https://vimeo.com/user10979346">Nature Works Everywhere</a> on <a href="https://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
 
. .
While in south people are still figuring how to build toilet or how to level a ship :D
 
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China's forests are mostly located outside Western China.
As a consequence, those populous provinces in the East have quite high forest coverage rates.
Zhejiang Province, China's No.4 GDP powerhouse (0.8 trillion US dollars),
has a forest coverage of 60%.
Guangdong, China's No.1 provincial economy (1.2 trillion dollars), over 50%.

Zhejiang Province


Fujian Province, 66% forests, 40 million people, GDP 0.5 trillion US dollars

It is not a coincident that China's provinces with highest forest coverage
are usually China's richest provinces.
Inclusive development is the key.
 
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Two generations spent 55 years building world's largest man-made forest in Saihanba, N. China
China Daily
Published on Aug 3, 2017

Saihanba, in the far north Hebei province, is a huge oasis that’s been reclaimed from the desert. How much do you know about the world’s largest man-made forest? Watch the latest Good Luck China episode to find out more!


Aerial view of Saihanba in N China
 
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