少妇无码精品23p_亚洲一区无码电影在线观看网站 _悠悠色一区二区_中文字幕亚洲无码第36页

--- SEARCH ---
WEATHER
CHINA
INTERNATIONAL
BUSINESS
CULTURE
GOVERNMENT
SCI-TECH
ENVIRONMENT
SPORTS
LIFE
PEOPLE
TRAVEL
WEEKLY REVIEW
Learning Chinese
Learn to Cook Chinese Dishes
Exchange Rates
Hotel Service
China Calendar


Hot Links
China Development Gateway
Chinese Embassies


Eco-protection Heals Nature's Wounds

Eco-construction in China was initiated by the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) in 1995, in response to rapidly deteriorating ecological conditions, resulting from excessive exploitation of natural resources.  

By the end of 2003, SEPA had designated 484 regions to showcase the way to address environmental and ecological problems while ensuring sound development of regional economies. Most of the regions are rural counties. Up to now, 82 have been verified as having met the 22 targets set by SEPA. These fall into three categories, namely, economic development, environmental protection and social progress, which are widely accepted as the three mainstays for sustainable development.

 

"Targets set for these regions are pretty low, though the regions are called 'State-level ecological pilot regions'," said Peng Jinxin, director of the SEPA Nature and Ecology Conservation Department.

 

"They were worked out in light of actual conditions in the mid 1990s."

 

Eco-construction on 'higher track'

 

In 1998, however, Hainan, China's southernmost island province, worked out the country's first provincial eco-construction program which will develop the province into an "ecological province" by 2030. Publication of the program in 1999 inspired two northeastern provinces, Jilin and Heilongjiang, to draw up programs for the same purpose. According to Peng Jinxin and other SEPA officials, SEPA responded to these developments by organizing 150 experts to formulate complete sets of eco-construction targets for administrative areas at different levels - 22 targets for provinces, 28 for cities and 36 for counties. These targets were put into trial implementation in 2003.

 

Right now, of China's 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions, seven provinces - Hainan, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Fujian, Zhejiang, Shandong and Anhui - have won SEPA approval to go ahead with programs to develop themselves into "ecological provinces."

 

Three more provinces, Hebei, Shaanxi and Jiangxi, have expressed the intention of following suit. "Work has just begun to push nationwide eco-construction onto a 'higher track' that takes both urban and rural areas into consideration," Peng said. "In fact, work on the 'lower track' has also been continuing. Based on overall consideration of the country's unbalanced economic situation, the promotion of 'double track' eco-construction is expected to deal with ecological conservation in developed and undeveloped areas."

 

Provinces get on the "higher track" on a voluntary basis, because China does not yet have a unified national program for ecological construction. "We are looking forward to seeing the first group of 'ecological provinces' come forth around 2020 - maybe in an embryonic form," Peng said.

 

The central government will provide financial help to provinces in implementing major eco-construction projects. SEPA, for its part, is always ready to offer relevant and needed expertise. "Our experts will help them work out eco-construction programs and targets and formulate policy privileges to promote eco-construction efforts," Peng said.

 

Capital-intensive industrialization

 

The "double-track" eco-construction comes at a crucial moment for the Chinese economy. According to Pan Jiahua, an environmental economist with the Research Center for Sustainable Development of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), the country "is completing the process of primitive capital accumulation and is shifting from labor-intensive industrialization to capital-intensive industrialization.

 

"In the phase of labor-intensive industrialization," said Pan, "a country, more often than not, allows the least investment in public utilities for environmental protection."

 

Pan, a Cambridge PhD, is one of the experts invited by SEPA to contribute ideas to China's eco-construction endeavor. He said: "Now that China is entering the stage of capital-intensive industrialization, it needs to invest massively in environmental and ecological development if it wants to achieve sound and rapid economic development."

 

According to SEPA investigations, China produces nearly 60 billion cubic meters of sewage a year, and 80 percent is emptied into inland waters without disposal. A national survey of more than 700 major rivers shows that nearly half of the river sections and over 90 percent of waters along riverside cities have been polluted.

 

In 1999, 97 percent of the sewage discharged in Hainan Province was emptied into the sea directly. Under its program of becoming an ecological province, the province is working hard to ensure disposal of 50 percent of the sewage by 2005.

 

Beijing currently only has 48 percent of its domestic sewage treated. The city plans to have 90 percent of such sewage disposed by 2008, the year it will host the 29th Olympic Games.

 

Air pollution is equally serious, if not worse, due to constantly increasing consumption of energy, coal and charcoal in particular. In 2000, China burned 861.26 million tons of coal. The figure rose to 1.126 billion tons in 2003, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

 

Green GDP

 

Officials and experts attribute China's environmental hazards to a "one-sided understanding" of development, which has promoted pursuit of economic growth at the expense and neglect of ecological conservation and environmental protection. For China, the world's largest developing country, development is the "unbending principle," as Deng Xiaoping, the late chief architect of China's reforms, put it. In practice, they noted, economic growth was often achieved at the expense of the environment.

 

For a long time in the past, gross domestic product (GDP) was taken as the sole criterion for measuring the success of a local government in promoting economic development. To address the problem, SEPA and NBS have begun organizing research on establishing a "green GDP" accounting system. "'Green GDP' refers to what is left of GDP yielded by a region with environmental costs deducted," Pan said. "In theory, 'green GDP' compels local governments to pay more attention to environmental protection while striving for economic growth. Double-track ecological construction will make implementation of 'green' GDP possible."

 

"Moreover," he said, "relatively prosperous regions, especially in the eastern part of the country, are willing to invest more in environmental protection."

 

In April, Pan headed a small team of experts and went to Tongxiang, a city in north Zhejiang Province, with the task of helping improve the first-draft of its eco-construction program.

 

The county-turned city covers 723 square kilometers, an area crisscrossed by rivers. Two thirds of the local population, 660,000 in all, live in the countryside. Changes that have taken place in the city, particularly in Wuzhen under the city's jurisdiction, convinced the team that ecological conservation must, and can, go hand-in-hand with economic growth.

 

Wuzhen, a water town with an area of 71 square kilometers and a population of 12,000, is a vivid Chinese version of Venice. In addition to wondrous scenic beauty, the 1,200-year-old town is famed for its riverside wooden-structured houses with black tiles and white walls, flagstone-paved streets and lanes, and stone arch bridges over waterways, all in traditional style.

 

Hoping to improve their life as quickly as possible, people in the area kicked off rural industrialization two decades ago - at the expense of the environment. Tongxiang used to have 130 kilns making bricks and tiles, mostly in rural areas. They burned huge quantities of coal, their chimneys belching black smoke day and night. Exhaust gas with fluoride contaminated the air, irritating silkworms in mulberry fields. Besides, the kilns consumed huge quantities of earth, destroying large tracts of farmland.

 

Fortunately, the local government and people realized what was wrong before it was too late. In May 1999, Tongxiang decided to develop its tourism industry with the emphasis on protection of Wuzhen.

 

The first-phase restoration of old-style houses and construction of infrastructure facilities cost 50 million yuan (US$6.02 million).

 

In 2001, Wuzhen scenic area received 1.85 million domestic tourists and over 50,000 foreign tourists. The revenue from tourism shot up from a mere 230 million yuan (US$27.7 million) in 1999 to 2.04 billion yuan (US$245 million) in 2002. It came to 1.69 billion yuan (US$204 million) in 2003 despite the onslaught of a SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrom) epidemic that almost paralyzed major infected cities in China.

 

The second-phase project is nearly done, involving an investment of 100 million yuan (US$12 million). The ancient Wuzhen has been placed in the UNESCO list of potential sites of world cultural heritage.

 

"We have had a bittersweet experience in rural industrialization," Zheng Xiaoyan, an engineer with the Tongxiang City Environmental Bureau, said. "Industrial pollution was so bad that for a long time, there wasn't enough potable water for us."

 

Since 1998, the city has spent 132 million yuan (US$1.45 million) in disposing of industrial sewage. It has budgeted another 621 million yuan (US$74.8 million) for building nine centralized sewage disposal projects with a daily capacity of 170,000 cubic meters. At present, the finished projects can dispose of 110,000 cubic meters of sewage a day.

 

Local GDP has grown at an annual average of 15 percent since 1999. According to Zheng, the local government spent 2.19 percent of the 2002 local GDP, which was 14.727 billion yuan (US$1.77 billion), on environmental protection. "When our GDP rose to 17.692 billion yuan (US$2.13 billion) in 2003," she said, "the rate was computed at 1.73 percent."

 

Circulatory economy

 

It took the local government four years to set things right. Seventy-nine kilns were blown up. The remaining 51 kilns have continued to produce bricks, with silt and slag to supplement clay as raw materials. Moreover, slag with unburned coal can fuel the kilns, saving 111,600 tons of raw coal annually. Most of the silt obtained from dredging waterways has been used to produce bricks. Each year, the kilns produce 1.8 billion bricks, consuming 810,000 cubic meters of silt and 630,000 tons of slag together.

 

Farmyard manure and silkworm droppings collected in the area, which have amounted to 800,000 tons this year, are being used mostly as fertilizer. "A 'circulatory economy' is being built in our area," Zheng said, referring to an economy based on recycling waste for multi-purpose utilization.

 

"I believe the core of 'circulatory economy' is the maximum utilization of resources and the minimum pollution to the environment."

 

According to its eco-construction program, the city is planning to develop four major chains of "circulatory economy," which call for the multi-purpose use of slag, silt, farmyard manure, garbage and crop stalks that would otherwise cause environmental hazards.

 

Experts speak highly of Tongxiang's programme to develop a full-blown "circulatory economy."

 

Pan Jiahua said: "We must develop our economy. This task is of paramount importance for China. Meanwhile, we must make the best use of the resources available to us. Tongxiang shows that this can be done by turning waste into useful materials."

 

The GDP generated by Tongxiang may be called "green." Nationwide, however, it may take years to see a "green GDP" accounting system established.

 

Wu You, an official from the NBS said: "It's extremely difficult to assess the losses caused by the ecological destruction in monetary terms."

 

Despite that, the green GDP concept will be tested in six "geographically representative" pilot municipalities and provinces, which lie in the northeast, north, east, central south, southwest and northwest. A final list will be issued in early 2005.

 

Possibly, it could take up three to six years to establish a framework for a "green GDP" accounting system, Wu said. If all goes well, such a system, no matter how rudimentary, will be spread across the country by 2010.

 

(China Daily October 15, 2004)

Zhejiang Declaration Vows to Build Eco-provinces
Premier Wen Calls for Intensified Ecological Protection
Hainan on Path to Ecologically Sound Province
Fujian to Be New Eco-province
Ecological Protection Urgent and Vital
China Stresses Overall Ecological Protection
Print This Page
|
Email This Page
About Us SiteMap Feedback
Copyright © China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68326688
精品久久久久久综合网| 色综合久久天天综线观看| 韩国毛片免费大片| 欧美夜夜骑 青草视频在线观看完整版 久久精品99无色码中文字幕 欧美日韩一区二区在线观看视频 欧美中文字幕在线视频 www.99精品 香蕉视频久久 | 欧美α片无限看在线观看免费| 国产精品自拍在线| 一级片片| 亚洲 欧美 成人日韩| 日本在线播放一区| 久久精品免视看国产明星| 黄视频网站免费观看| 欧美国产日韩久久久| 国产精品免费久久| 国产一区二区精品久久91| 精品国产一区二区三区久久久狼| 欧美另类videosbestsex高清| 日韩一级黄色大片| 99色视频在线| 精品国产一区二区三区精东影业| 九九精品在线| 欧美电影免费看大全| 可以免费看污视频的网站| 成人免费福利片在线观看| 日本特黄特色aaa大片免费| 国产视频一区二区在线观看| 日韩一级黄色片| 一级女性全黄久久生活片| 香蕉视频久久| 成人影视在线观看| 毛片电影网| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线| 欧美激情在线精品video| 美女免费精品视频在线观看| 91麻豆精品国产自产在线观看一区| 一级毛片看真人在线视频| 国产精品1024在线永久免费| 天天色成人网| 韩国三级视频网站| 欧美激情一区二区三区在线| 久久精品道一区二区三区| 可以免费在线看黄的网站| 国产亚洲精品aaa大片| 天天做人人爱夜夜爽2020毛片| 高清一级淫片a级中文字幕| 九九精品影院| 欧美爱爱网| 日本特黄特黄aaaaa大片| 国产麻豆精品hdvideoss| 天天做日日爱| 美女免费黄网站| 亚洲天堂免费| 黄视频网站免费| 日韩专区一区| 九九精品影院| 亚洲wwwwww| 久久精品人人做人人爽97| 99久久精品国产麻豆| 九九热国产视频| 免费国产在线观看不卡| 日韩女人做爰大片| 九九久久国产精品| 亚洲第一页色| 91麻豆精品国产高清在线| 国产原创中文字幕| 99久久视频| 日日夜夜婷婷| 国产成人啪精品| 精品久久久久久影院免费| 免费毛片播放| 日韩免费在线| 美女免费精品视频在线观看| 精品久久久久久影院免费| 国产美女在线观看| 一级毛片视频播放| 亚洲天堂在线播放| 国产视频一区在线| 色综合久久天天综合观看| 日本伦理黄色大片在线观看网站| 国产福利免费视频| 午夜精品国产自在现线拍| 九九久久99综合一区二区| 黄色福利片| 999久久久免费精品国产牛牛| 国产高清视频免费观看| 国产一区二区精品| 高清一级毛片一本到免费观看| 免费的黄色小视频| 精品国产一区二区三区久久久蜜臀 | 成人a大片高清在线观看| 亚洲 男人 天堂| 欧美激情一区二区三区中文字幕| 91麻豆爱豆果冻天美星空| 青草国产在线观看| a级黄色毛片免费播放视频| 日韩在线观看网站| 欧美a免费| 亚欧乱色一区二区三区| 国产不卡在线观看| 成人免费网站视频ww| 久久久久久久网| 九九九网站| 国产不卡福利| 欧美激情中文字幕一区二区| 好男人天堂网 久久精品国产这里是免费 国产精品成人一区二区 男人天堂网2021 男人的天堂在线观看 丁香六月综合激情 | 日韩一级黄色片| 日韩av东京社区男人的天堂| 精品视频一区二区三区| 99色视频| 天堂网中文字幕| 成人在免费观看视频国产| 国产91丝袜高跟系列| 亚洲 激情| 一本高清在线| 午夜精品国产自在现线拍| 九九久久国产精品| 亚久久伊人精品青青草原2020| 色综合久久天天综线观看| 色综合久久天天综合| 中文字幕一区二区三区 精品| 亚欧成人乱码一区二区| 色综合久久天天综合绕观看 | 美国一区二区三区| 精品视频在线看 | a级毛片免费全部播放| 精品国产三级a∨在线观看| 一 级 黄 中国色 片| 日本伦理网站| 韩国三级视频网站| 欧美夜夜骑 青草视频在线观看完整版 久久精品99无色码中文字幕 欧美日韩一区二区在线观看视频 欧美中文字幕在线视频 www.99精品 香蕉视频久久 | 精品国产一区二区三区久| 久久成人性色生活片| 国产精品1024在线永久免费| 日本免费看视频| 九九久久99综合一区二区| 国产亚洲免费观看| 日本免费乱人伦在线观看| 麻豆午夜视频| 国产不卡高清| 毛片高清| 999精品在线| 亚洲 欧美 成人日韩| 国产一区二区福利久久| 天天色成人网| 精品视频一区二区三区免费| 国产网站在线| 天天做日日爱| 国产a视频精品免费观看| 日本久久久久久久 97久久精品一区二区三区 狠狠色噜噜狠狠狠狠97 日日干综合 五月天婷婷在线观看高清 九色福利视频 | 麻豆污视频| 国产综合91天堂亚洲国产| 一级毛片视频播放| 国产91素人搭讪系列天堂| 香蕉视频亚洲一级| 成人免费一级纶理片| 欧美国产日韩一区二区三区| 国产网站免费视频| 四虎影视库| 久久福利影视| 国产成人啪精品| 97视频免费在线观看| 国产不卡在线观看视频| 欧美激情中文字幕一区二区| 日本伦理片网站| 久久久久久久免费视频| 国产网站免费| 欧美激情一区二区三区在线| 国产激情一区二区三区| 成人高清视频在线观看| 午夜激情视频在线观看| 欧美一级视| 黄视频网站免费观看| 日韩av片免费播放| 四虎久久精品国产| 国产一区二区精品久久91| 日本特黄一级| 久久国产精品自由自在| 天天做日日爱| 成人a大片在线观看| 99久久精品国产高清一区二区| 精品国产亚一区二区三区| 香蕉视频一级| 色综合久久手机在线| 午夜欧美成人久久久久久| 欧美激情一区二区三区视频| 亚洲第一页乱| 精品国产一区二区三区久久久狼| 国产亚洲精品成人a在线| 国产亚洲免费观看| 香蕉视频久久| 日本在线不卡视频| 久久精品店| 免费毛片播放| 精品国产三级a| 午夜激情视频在线播放| 国产高清在线精品一区二区| 深夜做爰性大片中文| 国产91精品一区| 九九久久国产精品大片| 台湾毛片| 日本久久久久久久 97久久精品一区二区三区 狠狠色噜噜狠狠狠狠97 日日干综合 五月天婷婷在线观看高清 九色福利视频 |