Despite the frequent sandstorms that have hit Beijing this
spring, the Chinese government is still optimistic that the 2008
Olympic Games in Beijing will be "Green Olympics".
"China will intensify afforestation efforts in and around
Beijing to create a better environment for the Olympic Games," said
Liu Tuo, head of the desertification prevention and treatment
department under the State Forestry Administration (SFA) on
Thursday.
Liu said China launched an afforestation project in sand-prone
areas in Hebei and Shanxi provinces and the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in 2001 to
tackle sandstorms that had been plaguing Beijing's environment for
years.
The coverage of forests and grass in these areas increased by an
average 30 percent, said Liu.
The sand control project has improved the air quality in
Beijing. The monitoring network of the Beijing Environmental
Protection Bureau found a significant drop in major pollutants in
the city in 2005, and more than 230 days of the year had good
weather, compared with 100 days in 1998.
"It's high time for the forests and grasslands to play their
roles in the 2008 Olympic Games. What's more, the Olympic Games is
scheduled in August, when sandstorms seldom happen in Beijing,"
said Liu.
Ten sandstorms have stricken northern China since February this
year and Beijing, which neighbors the Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region, a major sand source in China, has suffered the most serious
spring air pollution since 2002.
The strong sandstorm on Sunday alone brought more than 10 tons
of sand and dust per square kilometer to the urban area of Beijing,
according to the SFA's statistics.
Fifty to sixty percent of the sandstorms which hit Beijing
originate from places outside Beijing and even outside China, and
the major sand sources in Beijing are the sandy areas in its
outskirts and the construction sites in the city, said Yang Weixi,
chief engineer of Liu's department.
Higher temperatures and less rainfall in the arid parts of North
China, together with frequent cold air flow from Siberia, were to
blame for more severe sandstorms, according to Yang.
The drought sucks moisture from the soil and makes sand easier
to be picked up by the wind, said Yang.
The Beijing municipal government has invested heavily to improve
its environment since it won the right to host the 2008 Olympics.
It spent 60 billion yuan (US$7.5 billion) on pollution control
projects from 2000 to 2005.
"The sandy area in Beijing has thus dropped to 67,000 hectares
from 200,000 hectares three years ago, effectively reducing the
sand source inside Beijing," said Yang.
It is a long-term and tough task for desertification prevention
and treatment in China as there are around 1.74 million square
kilometers of desertified land in the country, accounting for 18
percent of China's land area, said Liu.
China would strengthen international cooperation in this field
and take measures against overgrazing, over-logging and over
collection of fire wood in the desertified area to honor the
promise that all the country's desertified land can be repaired by
2050, said Liu.
(Xinhua News Agency April 21, 2006)