Liaoning Province in northeast China is to launch a 10-year
environment improvement program to return 1,713,255 acres of arable
land in its central and northwestern mountainous areas to forests.
The afforestration project is one of the province's seven major
environment protection projects for the next decade, a provincial
forestry official said over the weekend.
The program, a major measure of the province to promote
agricultural restructuring and increase farmers' income, will be
carried out in 50 counties in these areas, which are suffering from
severe soil erosion and desertification.
The province will also launch a natural forest protection program,
banning timber felling in 34 counties in the eastern part.
Trees and grass will be planted along major highways, railways and
riverbanks, aiming at increasing the green coverage rate in these
places to 90 percent in five years.
The province also plans to develop three million hectares of
high-yield timber forest, which will be able to provide 51 million
cubic meters of timber.
In
addition, some 47 nature reserves will be set up across the
province covering a total area of 1.38 million hectares.
(Xinhua News Agency March 16, 2002)
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