Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Message from Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Macquarie Statement
- Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE CONTEXT
- PART TWO BIODIVERSITY: ITS CONSERVATION
- PART THREE CONSERVATION MEASURES
- PART FOUR USES OF COMPONENTS OF BIODIVERSITY
- PART FIVE PROCESSES AFFECTING BIODIVERSITY
- 20 Biodiversity and Climate Change Laws: A Failure to Communicate?
- 21 Emissions Trading: A Fantasy for China to Combat Global Warming?
- 22 A Brief Historical Comparison of the Public Land Disposal Policies in Brazil and in the United States
- 23 Protecting Ecological Functions: Ecological Function Zoning and Conservation Zones in the PRC
- 24 The Successful Ecograss Project and the Policy and Legal Issues Met and Solved
- PART SIX BIOSECURITY ISSUES
- PART SEVEN ACCESS AND BENEFIT-SHARING
- Index
24 - The Successful Ecograss Project and the Policy and Legal Issues Met and Solved
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Message from Kofi A. Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations
- Macquarie Statement
- Contributors
- Introduction
- PART ONE THE CONTEXT
- PART TWO BIODIVERSITY: ITS CONSERVATION
- PART THREE CONSERVATION MEASURES
- PART FOUR USES OF COMPONENTS OF BIODIVERSITY
- PART FIVE PROCESSES AFFECTING BIODIVERSITY
- 20 Biodiversity and Climate Change Laws: A Failure to Communicate?
- 21 Emissions Trading: A Fantasy for China to Combat Global Warming?
- 22 A Brief Historical Comparison of the Public Land Disposal Policies in Brazil and in the United States
- 23 Protecting Ecological Functions: Ecological Function Zoning and Conservation Zones in the PRC
- 24 The Successful Ecograss Project and the Policy and Legal Issues Met and Solved
- PART SIX BIOSECURITY ISSUES
- PART SEVEN ACCESS AND BENEFIT-SHARING
- Index
Summary
LOCATION AND NATURAL CONDITIONS OF THE ECOGRASS PROJECT
The Ecograss Project is in the western part of Jilin province, northeast of China. Geographically, Jilin province is divided into three parts: (1) the mountain-forest area in the east, (2) the plain agricultural lands in the middle, and (3) the grass-desert in the west. Because of climate change effects, including the land becoming drier, as well as overuse of the lands by agriculture and raising domestic animals (the number of which is six times normal capacity), approximately 10,000,000 Mu of western lands are in a state of serious degradation, calcification, and desertification, extending eastward at a rate of 1.4 percent per year, threatening the arable lands in the middle and eastern part of the province as well. Under the policy of sustainable development and rehabilitating the vulnerable agricultural land, the provincial government decided in 2000 that 4,200,000 Mu had to be taken out of agricultural and livestock.
CAUSES AND IMPACTS OF DESERTIFICATION
Desertification has been an obvious result of climate change in the western part of Jilin. Since the 1930s, rainfall has decreased 0.5 millimeters each year on average, and many rivers, lakes, and wetlands have disappeared, as have the birds. The agricultural and grazing lands have greatly dwindled. Sandstorms from the desert have spread to the entire province, to the north part of China, and even across the border and the ocean to Korea, Japan, and Russia.
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- Information
- Biodiversity Conservation, Law and Livelihoods: Bridging the North-South DivideIUCN Academy of Environmental Law Research Studies, pp. 455 - 462Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008