A study says more than one-third of China's territory is being damaged by wind and water, largely because of farming and forest loss. Transcript of radio broadcast: 08 December 2008
This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
A
new study says almost forty percent of China is losing soil because of wind and
water erosion. The Chinese government recently announced the results of a
three-year study. The study was the largest of its kind since China became a
communist nation in nineteen forty-nine.
A worker harvests rice in Yunnan province, in southwestern China
Researchers found that China has three
and one-half million square kilometers of eroded land. Water has eroded more
than one and one-half million square kilometers of that territory. Wind has
damaged almost two million square kilometers.
The
researchers blamed farming and the clearing of forests for much of the damage. Rural
areas are not the only ones losing soil. Land is also being affected in cities
and near mines and factories.
The researchers say that every year,
four and one-half billion tons of soil are washed or blown away. At that rate,
they say, grain production in northeastern China could decrease forty percent
within forty to fifty years. The country depends on that area for grain; the
northeast is often called China's breadbasket.
The research team estimates that erosion has cost China
at least twenty-nine billion dollars in economic losses since two thousand. The
team also says that seventy percent of China's poor live in areas damaged by soil
loss.
Xinhua,
the official news agency, reported that the team said China is in a worse situation
than many other countries suffering from soil erosion. These include India,
Japan, the United States and Australia.
Land sometimes becomes desert and can no
longer support plants. This process is called desertification. A study published
earlier this year suggested that climate change has been a major cause of this in
China. The paper appeared in Earth-Science Reviews in June.
Scientists say more than ninety
percent of grasslands in northern China have decreased in quality as a result
of desertification. Dried lakes in the north produce most of the dust that
affects life for people in cities like Beijing and Tianjin.
Still
another problem for China has been flooding along the Yangtze River. Widespread
flooding took place in the late nineteen nineties. After that, the government limited
tree cutting along the sides of mountains near the river.
And
that’s the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. Archives
of our reports are at voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Jim Tedder.