New Economic Model Breathes Life into Desert Control
China Daily, November 6, 2013 Adjust font size:
Wulan Dalai, one of the many herdsmen in Erdos, a southwestern city of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, never thought his sand land as part of the Maowusu desert would one day become a cash cow.
Like other herdsmen, he used to pin all his hopes on the hundred-odd sheep and cows he'd feed to boost his yearly income, which during good periods could reach 20,000 yuan (US$3,282).
But that amount was apparently dwarfed compared with what he has been earning since he cooperated with the China Inner Mu Biomass Power Company back in 2003.
The private Chinese company, dedicated to pioneering a new economic path that integrates desert control with biomass thermoelectricity and spirulina production in China, has been seeking sand land with aquifers to plant Salix psammophilas, creating the first link of the whole chain.
A good start, halfway there
Salix psammophila, a kind of shrub that can easily survive and grow in a desert because of its well-developed root system, is widely known as "green coal" for power plants with much cleaner emissions and more thermo capacity when burned.
"One magic thing about Salix psammophila is that it has to be cut down every three to five years in order to survive, or it will die in its sixth or seventh year," said Chen Yuchuan, general manager of the company. "Once sands are stabilized, grass and other kinds of bushes will naturally grow out."
And that's exactly the source of Wulan Dalai's money. He rents his sand land of more than four square kilometers to the company, and then participates in the process of tree planting, managing, cutting, transporting, etc. The rent, along with the errands combined, both earn him about 300,000 yuan a year.
"Now I feel much more motivated to plant trees on my land, because it can boost my income and help green the desert at the same time," said Dalai.
He is the first one to try this cooperation model with the company, and probably won't be the last.
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Salix psammophila, a kind of shrub that can easily survive and grow in a desert because of its well-developed root system, is seen at the Maowusu desert in Erdos, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Oct 20, 2013. The plant is widely known as "green coal" for power plants with much cleaner emissions and more thermo capacity when burned. [China Daily] |