China is facing a tremendous challenge in conserving biodiversity
due to natural factors like climate change and human-induced
ecological damage, such as pollution and over-fishing, a Chinese
official said Thursday.
China was actively trying to tackle the issue by revising
conservation measures, perfecting legislation, increasing funding
and encouraging broad public participation, said Wang Dehui, deputy
director-general of the Department of Nature and Ecology Protection
under the State Environmental Protection Administration.
Wildlife was diminishing constantly in China as a result of
degradation of habitat and excessive exploitation. Of the world's
640 endangered species listed by the International Endangered
Species Trade Convention, 156, or about 25 percent, were in China,
Wang told a workshop on the "Global Environmental Facility (GEF)
and Environmental Protection in China".
He
said China's environment was also being damaged by alien invasive
species, and the annual economic losses were up to over 50 billion
yuan (US$6.1 billion). According to a preliminary survey, half of
the world's 100 worst invasive species listed by the International
Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources had entered
China.
China ranked fourth, after the United States, Canada and Argentina,
in the release of transgenic crops into the environment, including
field experiments and commercial production, causing a growing
potential risk to biodiversity, the environment and human health,
he said.
Wang said west China was the country's richest biodiversity area
and was globally important, but it had become an urgent issue for
China to conserve biodiversity during construction following the
implementation of the West China Development Strategy.
China was revising its national Biodiversity Conservation Action
Plan, adding new regulations on biosafety, alien invasive species,
and access to and benefit sharing of genetic resources, in an
effort to incorporate biodiversity conservation into the
exploitation of resources in west China, economic construction and
development, he said.
China's National Tenth Five-Year (2001-2005) Plan for Environmental
Protection specified an investment of 50 billion yuan (US$6.1
billion) for priority biodiversity and eco-environment projects,
and 10 billion yuan (US$1.2 billion) for strengthening national
basic capacity building, Wang said.
(Xinhua News Agency October 18, 2002)
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