home feedback about us  
   
CHINAGATE.WEST DEVELOPMENT    
    Key Issues  
 
  Sustainable development & environment  
  Industrial restructuring  
  Infrastructure  
  Market mechanism  
  Capital market  
  High-tech  
  Education & HR  
  Overseas Investment  
  Minority prosperity  
  East-west cooperation  
  Agriculture  
  Travel  
 
 
       
       
       
     
       
       
       
       
 
 
 
Gansu invests billions to protect environment at Silk Road city


2007-11-06
Xinhua

Northwest China's Gansu province has announced it will spend 1.9 billion yuan (US$253 million) in the next three years to protect the environment and archaeological treasures at Dunhuang, a Silk Road city and home to historic Buddhist grottoes.

The plan, the province's latest endeavor to reverse the deteriorating environmental situation, listed 20 projects, including upgrading irrigation facilities, converting croplands to grasslands and forests, and diverting 120 million cubic meters of water from the more ample Ha'erteng River to boost water stocks at the city's dwindling Dang River.

The plan also includes relocation of more than 3,000 people in the next three years from areas that are threatened by desertification.

Part of the investment is earmarked for restoring vegetation on mountains near the Mogao Grottoes, to stabilize its statue structures and stop desert expansion.

The UN-listed world heritage site known as the Cave of a Thousand Buddhas, home to some of the world's best examples of ancient Buddhist art, dating back 1,500 years.

But climate warming and over exploitation of water have begun threatening environmental and the cultural relics.

Both city and provincial governments have taken repeated measures to patch up the battered environment, but efforts are still weak compared with the austere ecological degradation.

The Kumtag, China's sixth largest desert, is expanding by one to four meters eastward every year. Its nearest floating dune is only five kilometers from Dunhuang.

Statistics from the city hydrological department show underground water levels dropped 10.77 meters from 1975 to 2001, and are still declining by 0.24 meters every year.

Rivers and lakes in the city have shrunk by 80 percent in the past 30 years. The water level at Yueyaquan, a crescent-shaped desert water body, dropped from 7.5 meters in 1960 to only 1.3 meters in 2004.

 

 
   
 
home feedback about us  
  Produced by www.chinadaily.com.cn. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@chinagate.com.cn