The annual land reclamation of the country is expected to reach 500-700
square kilometers in the next five years, thanks to the fast growing economy and
the dearth of developable land on the coasts.
The deputy director of Sea
Area Management Department of the State Ocean Administration (SOA), A Dong, said
yesterday that the reclaimed land would be used as fisheries, seafood farms, and
for tourism and transportation.
At present, China reclaims about 300
square kilometers of land every year.
And despite the increase in
reclamation, the SOA would see to it that the seas are not over-exploited. Land
reclaimation can harm the marine environment, A Dong said.
In fact, the
SOA has asked experts to study whether rapid reclamation could result in serious
damage to the environment, especially marine ecology.
He said the law had
played an important role in keeping rampant reclamation under check, and would
continue to do so in the future, too.
The deputy director of SOA's Sea
Area Management Department, Lu Caixia, said: "Earlier, many cases of unnecessary
reclamation used to be reported, and the interests of fishermen could not be
safeguarded."
But the law gave the fishermen the right to seek
compensation if their designated areas were occupied by tourism, transportation
or other big projects.
"So the fishermen and others dependent on the sea
for their livelihood are now willing to pay some fees. In some places, the right
to use a certain area of the sea has even been allocated through bidding," Lu
said.
In Guangdong Province, which is rich in sea resources, the right
to use of 0.06 hectare of sea fetched up to 20,000 yuan ($2,500) last
year.
In 2006, SOA collected more than 1.5 billion yuan ($188 million) as
fee to use the sea, 500 million yuan ($63 million) more than the previous
year.
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