A concerned Li Chunlong can not understand why his farmland does
not yield as much quality corn as before.
The 55-year-old farmer lives in northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province, which is dubbed "the Granary of China" for its large
areas of fertile and productive black soil.
However, a recent research report said that the ecological
environment is in a critical condition in northeast China, which
also includes Jilin and Liaoning provinces, as excessive land
reclamation, grazing and irrational use of fertilizer and
pesticide, have led to a sharp deterioration in the quality of its
soil.
The report, issued by the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said
34 percent of the total black land in the region has been eroded,
and the black soil layer has been reduced by 50 percent over the
past five decades.
Lu Hongwen, a provincial agricultural official of Heilongjiang,
said irrational land development, neglect of water and soil
conservation, as well as over-cultivation, have accelerated the
deterioration.
"If the deterioration can not be halted in time, sustainable
development would be gravely affected in the region," the report
warned.
In many parts of China's rural areas, modernized agricultural
production, resource exploitation and urbanization have been
detrimental to the environment.
Official statistics indicate that over one third of the
country's land has been ravaged by acid rain and many of its major
rivers are polluted.
The Daye Lake, located in central China's Hubei Province, once
boasted an area of 1,106 square kilometers. It has shrunk to only
one third of its area in the 1950s.
"Years ago the lake was abundant in fish and local people made a
living by fishing," said 58-year-old Feng Meilin, a farmer who
lives near the lake.
"But now not only the fish are dying out. The lake is also in
danger of disappearing, as large amounts of deposits from nearby
iron mines have been discharged into the lake and have silted
it."
The exploitation of iron mines has also resulted in the
reduction of the underground water level, which makes it more
difficult to get enough water for crops and drinking, another local
farmer said.
Environment experts said that rural environmental pollution in
China is increasingly severe as more and more factories move to the
suburbs when local officials introduce industrial projects.
In China's vast rural areas, especially in those developed areas
with township enterprises and exploitation projects, land and water
without any pollution has become rare.
As China sets out to build a new socialist countryside,
improving the rural environment is becoming more urgent.
"The sustainable development of China's rural areas has a lot to
do with the ecological environment," said Zhao Yanbin, a provincial
environment conservation official.
If the rural environment can not be improved as soon as
possible, hundreds of millions of Chinese farmers may fall victim
to the deteriorating rural environment," Zhao said.
(Xinhua News Agency March 3, 2006)