Yellow River source faces ecological woes By Sun Xiaohua (China Daily) Updated: 2005-10-11 05:57
A catalogue of environmental damage resulting from a climate change is
pushing the region around the source of the Yellow River into an ecological
breakdown, a survey commissioned by Greenpeace has found.
The survey results say that in the past 50 years, the average temperature in
the region near Madoi County in Northwest China's Qinghai Province, has risen by
0.88 C.
In the past 30 years, the region has lost 17 per cent of its glaciers and
2.39 billion cubic metres of water directly. The rate of melting ice is 10 times
faster than it was in the previous 300 years.
"Climate change is the root of the environmental problems there," said Liu
Shiyin, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences who took part in the
survey and penned the results.
"Higher temperatures and drier climates due to global warming are melting the
glaciers and the permafrost, draining the lakes and leading to land degradation.
It is a domino effect that harms the flora, fauna, landscape, people living in
that region and the river itself."
For example, in the past 15 years, among the 4,077 lakes in Madoi County,
more than 3,000 of the smaller ones have disappeared. And in many of the
remaining lakes, the water margins are shrinking.
The permafrost's melting seriously affects construction projects, such as
road building, on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. As a picture taken during the
survey showed, the surface of the Qinghai-Tibet Road has become rough, easily
leading to road accidents.
Grassland degradation brings trouble to the lives of nomads. Without enough
grass to feed their livestock, many have given up their feeding and become
poverty-stricken.
"A climate change is wreaking havoc at the birthplace of China's 'Mother
River,'" said Li Moxuan, Greenpeace China researcher.
(China Daily 10/11/2005 page2)
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