Horticultural expo to boost green living
By Huang
Yiran and Leng Shumei
A grand
international horticultural exhibition, scheduled to kick off on Monday, April
29, is widely seen as the best way to demonstrate China’s achievements and
commitment to global ecological construction.
President
Xi Jinping attended the opening ceremony on Sunday evening, calling for the
pursuit of harmony between man and nature.
Xi said
that the overall balance of the Earth’s ecology should be maintained, so that
the starry sky, lush mountains and floral fragrance will be retained for future
generations who will enjoy material prosperity at the same time, the Xinhua
News Agency reported.
Lucid
waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets and improving ecological
environment is increasing productivity, Xi said.
The
theory was first raised by Xi in 2005 during an inspection tour to Anji, East
China’s Zhejiang Province. Xi reaffirmed the theory during several inspection
tours after the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC)
was convened in 2012.
He
proposed embracing simple, moderate, green and low-carbon ways of life, and
making the idea of ecological and environmental conservation the mainstream
culture in society.
This is
the second high-level horticultural expo held in China after the first one
hosted in Kunming, capital of Southwest China’s Yunnan Province in 1999.
The expo
is being held at a 503-hectare site at the foot of the Great Wall in Beijing’s
Yanqing district, which is a national progress demonstration district and an
innovative base for practicing the theory of “lucid waters and lush mountains
are invaluable assets,” an expo brochure reads.
From April
29 until October 7, more than 16 million visitors are expected at the expo,
which will host 2,500 activities, including academic conferences, horticulture
competitions and flower parades, officials from the organizing committee said
at a press conference on Thursday, April 25.
Eighty-six
countries and regions, as well as 24 international organizations, will display
horticultural arts alongside domestic exhibitors from 31 provincial-level
administrations, officials said.
The expo
will provide opportunities for the world to see what China has achieved as
there are many greening programs around Beijing, such as the Three-North
Shelterbelt Forest Program, said Ding Yifan, a research fellow of the Institute
of World Development at the State Council’s Development Research Center.
“It will
also be a platform for different countries to exchange experiences in green
development,” Ding said.
The
Three-North Shelterbelt Forest Program - dubbed the Great Green Wall - was
launched in 1978 to halt desertification and provide a green buffer zone from
China’s arid northern regions. The project had rehabilitated 33.6 million
hectares of desert land as of November 2018, China Central Television (CCTV)
reported.
Geng
Liwen, an expo volunteer from the Beijing Forestry University, told the Global Times on April 28 that she is
happy to see more Chinese people paying attention to the idea of green
development. “This will benefit sectors related to forestry, including parks
and city planning," she said.
Green ideology
One of
the keys to China’s great achievement in green development is participation by
governments, business and local residents, Ding said.
China
accelerated the promotion of green development after the 18th CPC National
Congress. Since then, it had implemented more than 40 plans, including
establishing an accountability system, a national park system and cracking down
on imports of foreign waste to enhance construction of an ecological
civilization, the People’s Daily
reported on April 28.
Between
2013 and 2018, China reforested 40 million hectares, boosting the country’s
total forest coverage to 215 million hectares, said the report.
This
year also marks the 40th anniversary of China’s National Tree Planting Day,
which takes place every year on March 12. In the past 40 years, China’s forest
area and forest stock volume have doubled, the Xinhua News Agency reported.
The
proportion of China’s contribution to the world’s vegetation increase also
ranks first. A NASA report released in February revealed that China accounted
for at least one-fourth of the 5 percent increase in global green leaf areas
between 2000 and 2017, although this also includes cropland.
Chinese
enterprises also showed innovation in mobilizing Chinese people to plant trees.
For example,
Alipay, the mobile and online payment service of China’s e-commerce giant
Alibaba Group Holding, launched a program in 2016 to help users to plant real
trees in arid areas by collecting virtual energy points through a low-carbon
lifestyle. The program had planted more than 55 million trees covering about
507 square kilometers across China as of February.
Besides
planting trees, efforts have also been made in China to adjust the energy
structure and control industrial discharge. The proportion of coal consumption
has decreased by 1.4 percent to 59 percent of the country’s total energy
consumption in 2018, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
Source: Global
Times
At the International Pavilion of
the 2019 Expo, 94 “flower umbrellas” are clustered together to form a white
flower sea. (Photo by Weng Qiyu from People’s Daily Online)
Horticultural expo to boost green living
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