Biodiversity protection boosted by latest plan

BEIJING: China has further enhanced its top-level design for biodiversity conservation with a 2023-30 national strategy and an action plan that vows to restore at least 30 percent of the nation’s degraded ecosystems by the end of this decade.
The document, which was made public on Thursday last week, noted the grim situation for biodiversity conservation in China, saying: “The country’s ecosystems, species and genetic diversity are all suffering from varying degrees of degradation and loss.”
With degradation to one degree or another, the country’s grassland ecosystems are generally fragile, it noted. Functional degradation and loss have also occurred in the ecosystems of some rivers, wetlands and lakes.
Quoting the Redlist of China’s Biodiversity, the latest version of which was made public last year, the action plan said 4,088 of the higher plant species, or roughly 10 percent of the total assessed, were under threat. It said 1,050 vertebrate species in the country — excluding fish — were also under threat, representing some 22 percent of the total assessed.
“There remain significant conflicts between biodiversity conservation and socioeconomic development in different regions,” it said.
Overexploitation, intensified land use changes that have encroached upon natural spaces and the disorderly development of biological resources have further exacerbated the biodiversity conservation situation, it said.
Shen Manhong, dean of Zhejiang A&F University’s Institute of Ecological Civilization, said the document has made China’s biodiversity conservation even more systematic. It not only includes control measures, but also incentives and awareness measures that can make people more willing to protect biodiversity, said Shen, who is also former Party secretary of the university in Hangzhou, Zhejiang’s provincial capital. –The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item