A world leading paper maker has seriously damaged the
bio-diversity and ecological environment of a pristine rainforest
in Hainan Province by the mass planting of trees in the nature
reserve, Jin Zhicheng, China's State Forestry Administration
spokesperson said yesterday.
The administration has ordered the Hainan forestry department to
investigate the issue and to protect Southeast Asia's biggest
original forest, where Indonesia-based Asia Pulp Paper is now mass
planting eucalyptus trees, Jin said.
Overseas investors are welcomed to plant forest in China, but
they must get approval from the Chinese government, Jin said.
The investors must follow scientific methods to protect
ecological environment, and ensure any cultivation can't harm local
economic development or local farmers, Jin said.
Environmental group Greenpeace on March 28 condemned APP saying
that its eucalyptus tree plantation in Yingge Mountain had damaged
the environment in the rain forest and was in violation of Chinese
regulations.
However, APP has published a statement on its Website, claming
that it had approval from the government before beginning
operations in the woodland and that it didn't break any rules.
The company also said Hainan authorities had conducted a field
survey on August 9, 2006 which showed that the timberland in
question didn't belong to the nature reserve.
China has put a hold on the sale and leasing of state-owned
forests to head off a potential environmental disaster.
The administration found construction projects covering 741.3
hectares of timberland across the country have been done without
approval. And work on 2,874.4 hectares of timberland had begun
before the official go-ahead was given.
The administration has ordered the Hainan Jinhai Pulp and Paper
Co, a branch of Asia Pulp and Paper Co, to cease its efforts to
purchase a large area of state-owned forest.
Jinhai had breached rules by attempting to acquire a 58 percent
stake in the state-owned Yunnan Yunjing Forestry and Pulp Company
in southwest China's Yunnan Province, involving a transfer of
66,667 hectares of woodland.
Chinese law requires that all transfers of state-owned forest
resources follow strict evaluation procedures, and conform with
State Council earnings distribution regulations.
(Shanghai Daily April 6, 2007)
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