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The ecosystem in Tibet is extremely fragile, and the ability to resist
disturbance and regenerate is weak. Once the ecosystem is damaged, it
is hard to restore it for a long period of time. For more than 50 years
Tibet has adhered to the strategy of sustainable development, ensuring
the close combination and coordinated development of ecological improvement,
environmental protection and economic construction. While the economy
develops rapidly and the people's living standards are constantly
rising, the ecological environment is being effectively protected. In
accordance with the latest monitoring findings, the environment of water
and the atmosphere in Tibet are basically unpolluted. The average annual
concentration of suspended particles in the atmosphere of Tibet's
cities is between 193 and 268 per cu m. No major environmental pollution
accident has occurred in Tibet, and most of its major rivers and lakes
are in a primordial state.
-- Environmental protection and ecological improvement are synchronized
with agricultural production and development. In Tibet, the natural conditions
for agriculture are poor, infrastructure is weak, grain productivity is
low and the capability to withstand natural disasters is low. Therefore,
it is necessary to strengthen agricultural infrastructure construction,
transform low- and medium-yield fields and improve the level of the agricultural
ecosystem for agricultural production and development. With this aim in
mind, the government of the Tibet Autonomous Region has endeavored to
raise grain yield by improving the eco-environment for agricultural development.
The government is helping farmers change their traditional cultivation
habits of letting land lie idle after harvest -- a centuries-old
practice known as "white fallow," which is detrimental to
water and soil conservation. Rotation of grain and grass is adopted to
increase the fertility of the soil and its ability to conserve water.
While attention is paid to farmland water conservancy construction, a
forest shelter network is being built to protect farmland from being eroded
by sandstorms. As a result of persistent efforts, the rate of land usage
in the major agricultural producers in central Tibet has increased greatly,
and the level of soil erosion has declined markedly. Natural conditions
like water and heat, which are fundamental to the growth of farm produce,
have been improved. In 2000, surveys by experts found that the comprehensive
eco-environment appraisal index of this area has gone up by 1.5 percentage
points from 10 years ago. The improvement of the ecological environment
has steadily increased agricultural productivity. By 2001, agriculture
in Tibet had had bumper harvests for 14 years in a row. The total grain
output had reached 982,500 tons, enough to make Tibet basically self-sufficient.
The State has invested a large sum of money on a series of comprehensive
agricultural development projects in Tibet. It is making sure that while
land areas are expanded, the ecological environment is improved at the
same time. In the major construction projects, such as the comprehensive
agricultural development project on the middle reaches of the "three
rivers" with an investment of 1.2 billion yuan from the Central
Government, environmental protection and ecological improvement are made
key parts of the projects. Monitoring of the ecological environment in
comprehensive agricultural development in the "three rivers"
area in the past 10 years indicates that, due to an organic combination
of biological and engineering measures, both the types and rate of land
utilization and the acreage of man-made vegetation in the area have increased
markedly. Desertification and soil erosion have been effectively checked,
and the comprehensive index of the eco-environment quality has been raised
by one to three grades. Comprehensive agricultural development has not
only reaped significant economic benefits, but also resulted in good social
and ecological benefits.
-- Industrial projects are selected carefully, and pollution prevention
and control are strengthened. Industry was not developed at all in Tibet
until after the region's peaceful liberation. Even today, there
are few industrial enterprises in Tibet, and so industrial pollution is
not much of a problem. In order to reduce the bad effects caused to the
ecological environment by industrial development, the government of the
Tibet Autonomous Region has adhered to the principle of placing equal
emphasis on both industrial development and environmental protection.
As industries are developed in the region, Tibet has made every effort
to ensure that while they bring about economic profits they have social
and environmental benefits as well. No industrial project is to be launched
just because of its envisaged economic benefit or just because it will
fill a gap in the field. To effectively combat pollution, the government
has adopted a series of pollution-prevention measures to ensure that the
development of modern industry does not damage the ecological environment.
First, industrial pollution is dealt with through industrial restructuring,
product-mix adjustment and technological transformation. For instance,
the Lhasa Leather Factory has imported environmental-protection facilities
along with advanced technologies and equipment from Germany. The Lhasa
Brewery, which used to be a big polluter, has spent more than four million
yuan on equipment to treat industrial sewage as part of its technological
transformation efforts. As a result, its sewage discharge has met the
specified standard. Second, supervision and management of the environment
has been tightened. Rectification has been carried out in respect of enterprises
that fail to meet the requirements for pollutant discharge. In accordance
with the guiding principle of "opening big enterprises and shutting
down small ones" for industrial restructuring, six vertical-kiln
cement production lines in Lhasa proper, which used to be serious polluters,
have been shut down. Enterprises causing serious pollution are barred
from production, and outdated technologies and equipment prohibited by
the State have been winnowed out.
-- Strengthening evaluation and management of the impact of resources
development and major infrastructure construction projects on the ecological
environment. A policy is implemented ensuring that no new construction,
reconstruction and expansion projects shall be authorized unless an evaluation
of their impact on the environment has been conducted. This policy and
the system of the "three simultaneouses" (pollution prevention
facilities are designed, built and commissioned simultaneously with the
main project) are strictly enforced. More than 80% of medium-sized and
large construction projects have gone through evaluation of their impact
on the ecological environment. The Norbusa and Shangkasam chromite mining
projects include eco-environmental protection as a key task in resources
development. With respect to the hydropower station at Yamzhoyumco Lake,
which has attracted the attention of the world, full consideration was
given to the protection of the ecological environment, starting from the
decision to build the station to its design and construction. Since this
hydropower station was put into operation, electricity generation has
not caused the water level in the lake to drop, which would have harmed
the natural eco-environment of the lake.
-- Much attention has been paid to the comprehensive treatment
of the ecological environment in urban areas in order to improve people's
living environment in areas with dense population. The comprehensive management
of the ecological environment in cities and towns has always been stressed
in ecological improvement and environmental protection work in Tibet.
To guarantee the quality of the atmospheric environment, Tibet is actively
popularizing the use of non-polluting energy sources in cities and towns,
and phasing out fuels such as faggot, ox dung, coal and oil currently
being commonly used by local residents. It encourages people to adopt
natural gas as fuel for daily use. By 2001, the number of liquefied petroleum
gas users in Lhasa and Xigaze had increased to 44,600 households, accounting
for 83% of their combined total. At the same time, Tibet is actively using
clean energy sources like water, geothermal, solar and wind energies.
A pattern featuring water energy as the main energy source complemented
by other types of energies has initially been formed, and has been a great
help to the protection of the ecological environment. The amount of solar
energy used in Tibet each year is equivalent to that provided by 130,000
tons of standard coal. In Lhasa and Xigaze, 1,693.6 ha of land are covered
by trees or grass, and 47.48 ha are public green areas. The rate of green
coverage in established districts is 23.5%. Construction of plumbing and
treatment of sewage have been pushed ahead in urban areas, and 679,460
m of water supply pipes and 392,770 m of sewage pipes have been laid.
The government has invested 51.2794 million yuan in building Lhasa's
garbage disposal plants, and garbage disposal facilities for other cities
are being actively planned.
-- Devoting major efforts to the development of tourism and other
specialty industries that are beneficial to the protection of the ecological
environment. Developing specialty industries with relatively little impact
on the ecological environment has always been an important policy in accelerating
the economic development of Tibet. With its unique natural geographical
and cultural environments, Tibet enjoys a nature-endowed advantage in
developing tourism and other tertiary industries. In 1996, the People's
Government of the Tibet Autonomous Region adopted the "Decision
on Speeding Up the Development of Tourism," and put tourism --
one of the Autonomous Region's pillar industries -- in a
prominent place and develop it vigorously. In 2001, Tibet played host
to 686,100 domestic and foreign tourists, its earnings from tourism totaling
750 million yuan and its earning of foreign exchange reaching 46.38 million
US dollars. Some 6,506 people are directly involved in the tourist industry,
while more than 30,000 people are indirectly involved. The status of tourism
in Tibet's economy is rising. Although tourism pollutes the environment
to only a very small extent, the local government has paid much attention
to problems arising from the damage to the ecosystem and from environmental
pollution in the development of tourism. Tourism and environmental protection
departments are actively taking measures to collect, classify and dispose
of garbage left in scenic spots to prevent pollution of the eco-environment.
Garbage bins have even been set up at the harsh Mt. Qomolangma mountaineering
headquarters. Garbage left by climbers and tourists is collected, removed
and disposed of periodically. |