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A sea of sand is threatening China's heart By Joseph Kahn (IHT) Updated: 2006-06-08 11:13
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/06/08/asia/web.0608desert.php
MINQIN, China China's own favorite military strategist, Sun Tzu, surely would
have warned against letting two mighty enemies, the Tengger and the Badain
Jaran, form a united front.
Yet a desert pincer is squeezing this
struggling oasis town, and China's long campaign to cultivate its vast arid
northwest is in retreat.
An ever-rising tide of sand has claimed
grasslands, ponds, lakes and forests, swallowed whole villages and forced tens
of thousands of people to flee as it surges south and threatens to leave this
ancient Silk Road greenbelt uninhabitable.
Han Chinese women here cover
their heads and faces like Muslims to protect against violent sandstorms.
Farmers dig wells down hundreds of feet. If they find water, it is often
brackish, even poisonous.
Chinese leaders have vowed to protect Minqin
and surrounding towns in Gansu Province. The area divides two deserts, the
Badain Jaran and the Tengger, and its precarious state threatens to accelerate
the spread of barren wasteland to the heart of China.
The national 937
Project, set up to fight the encroaching desert, estimated in April that 1,500
square miles of land, roughly the size of Rhode Island, is buried each year.
Nearly all of north central China, including Beijing, is at
risk.
Expanding deserts and a severe drought are also making this a
near-record year for dust storms carried east in the jet stream. Sand squalls
have blanketed Beijing and other northern cities, leaving a stubborn yellow haze
in the air and coating roads, buildings, cars and lungs.
Prime Minister
Wen Jiabao traveled to the northwest in May to offer aid to drought-stricken
farmers and order provincial officials to supply more water to Minqin.
But while local officials have tried grandiose projects to rescue the
outpost, environmentalists say it will probably have to be at least partly
abandoned and returned to nature if the regional ecology is to be
restored.
"We must find ways to live with nature in some kind of
balance," said Chai Erhong, an environmentalist and writer who lives in Minqin.
"The government mainly wants to control nature, which is what did all the harm
in the first place."
Government-led cultivation, deforestation,
irrigation and reclamation almost certainly contributed to the desert's advance,
which began in the 1950's and the 1960's, and has accelerated. Critics warn that
some lessons of past engineering fiascoes remained unlearned.
During the
ill-fated Great Leap Forward in the late 1950's, Mao ordered construction of the
giant Hongyashan reservoir near Minqin, which diverted the flow of the Shiyang
River and runoff from the Qilian Mountains into an irrigation system. It briefly
made Minqin's farmland fertile enough to grow grain.
But Minqin is a
desert oasis that gets almost no rainfall. The Shiyang and its offshoots had
been its ecological lifeline. With the available water resources monopolized for
farming, nearly all other land became a target for the desert.
Today,
patches of farmland that cling to irrigation channels are emerald islands in a
sea of beige, an agricultural Palm Springs.
Even the irrigated plots risk
extinction. Competing reservoirs on upper reaches of the Shiyang reduced its
flow so severely by 2004 that the Hongyashan went dry for the first time since
its construction in 1959. It was refilled after Beijing ordered an emergency
diversion of water from the Yellow River, which now runs dry through much of the
year here in its northern reaches.
Local officials, whose promotions in
the government and Communist Party hierarchy depend more on increasing economic
output than on improving the environment, have tried desperately to preserve
Minqin's farming.
They have pleaded with cities on the upper reaches of
the Shiyang to take less of its water. They have also dug wells at a furious
pace - 11,000 of them altogether, some reaching more than a thousand feet
down.
Minqin also planted ramparts of rose willow, buckthorn and other
deep-root trees in a 200-mile file along the desert fronts.
Such
solutions have not worked. The trees are now stranded by sand.
Wang Tao,
who heads the 937 Project - priority projects are labeled with a 9 - said the
only viable strategy to save arid land in Gansu, Inner Mongolia and Ningxia was
to move people out, reduce production, form conservation parks and let nature
heal itself.
"Minqin is not going to get more water," he said in a
telephone interview from his base in Lanzhou. "It needs fewer people."
In
fact, a 200-year trend of migration into northern Gansu from overcrowded lands
in south and central China has shifted sharply into reverse, with tens of
thousands of farmers being relocated, some as far away at Heilongjiang, in the
northeast.
Along Minqin's northern frontier, villages like Xiqu, Zhongqu,
Shoucheng and Hongshaliang have been fully or partly abandoned. Sand dunes
smother empty homes. Olive, plum and date trees are stacked for
firewood.
Shen Tangguo reckons that he is the only remaining farmer in
his village, Huanghui, which once had several hundred. He carries water by
motorcycle from a well a few miles away to irrigate his cotton, which he says is
resilient but low yielding.
He has pictures of Mao and Zhou Enlai and
more recent Chinese leaders on his walls. But he says he has not seen an
official in Huanghui since someone dropped by to collect a road-building tax a
few months ago.
"Everyone else left because they have friends who can
arrange things," he said. "I don't have any friends."
Mr. Chai, the
Minqin environmentalist, grew up north of the city in a village now struggling
to survive. His father left the village a few years ago to live with Mr. Chai,
who is 44.
Their ancestral home now has two remaining walls and no roof.
The local elementary school closed last year; only three children were showing
up for class.
The village's decline prompted Mr. Chai to study ecology on
his own. He now speaks volubly about the desert ecosystem and writes newspaper
and magazine articles calling on the authorities to abandon water engineering
projects so his native land has a chance to recover.
But he is not
optimistic. Just outside his village is a vast wind-whipped plain where, he
said, his father used to fish. It was called Qingtu Lake, one of the largest in
China's northwest until the diversion of the Shiyang gave the lake to the
Tengger.
Six inches down, the soil remains dark. On the surface, there
are shells, fish bones and a snowlike powder left behind by the alkaline
waters.
"This is not a natural disaster - it is man-made," Mr. Chai said.
"And unless people study the lesson of Minqin, it will repeat itself clear
across China."
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