7-3 Reversal of the
Impoverishment-Degradation Cycle in Jinshanmen Area
Project Scope and Relationship to China's Agenda
21
This project seeks to reverse the vicious circle
of economic impoverishment and environmental degradation through sustainable
agricultural and mining development. The project is based on the Sustainable
Agricultural and Rural Development objective mentioned in programme area
13A of China's Agenda 21. It contributes to a number of related fields including
Alleviating Poverty, Replacement of Outdated Mining Technologies, the Development
of Natural Resources, Sustainable Management of Land Resources, Reclamation
of Degraded Ecosystems, Management of Desertification and Sandy Soils, and
Reducing Natural Disasters, as mentioned in programme areas 8A, 12C, 14A,
14B, 14C, 16A, 16B, 16C, 16D, and 17C.
1. Background
The Jinshanmen Area is located in the two provinces
Shanxi, Shaanxi and the Autonomous Region of Inner Mongolia. It covers 48,800
square kilometres. Geologically it is part of the Loess Plateau to the north
and the Yellow river basin stretching toward the south.
The land is rather thinly populated and infertile.
It has many ravines and deserts and faces a severe shortage of water resources.
The western part consists of sandy hills severely eroded by wind-blown sand.
The eastern part suffers from severe soil erosion. Its rivers are a major
source of coarse sand deposit in the Yellow River south of the Jinshanmen
region.
The socio-economic base of the region is weak.
The food grain supply depends upon cereals from outside the area and other
local agricultural products and by-products are not plentiful. Illiterate
and semi-illiterate people account for 30 percent of the total population.
Poverty is rampant. Currently, the large scale exploitation of coal resources
is accompanied by a drastic growth of population. This population growth
when combined with irrational mining activities has deteriorated the vulnerable
environment further.
The deteriorating environment poses a serious obstacle
to economic development. The rather poor soil of the hillside farmland is
washed away at a rate of eight to ten tons per mu annually, which makes
the soil increasingly infertile and the grain yield lower. Aridity and windblown
sand are also great threats. People suffer from a shortage of drinking water.
The Mu us Desert is continuing to advance into the farmland and threatens
villages and small towns so much that people have started emigrating southeastward.
Industrial development may assist the population
in elevating its level of income. A plan presently informally circulating
proposes a band-shaped area of industrial and mining enterprises along the
Ulan Moron River with Daliuta town as the center. The population would grow
from twenty thousand to half a million. However, first, the environmental
implications need careful study.
Improved environmental, economic and technological
management requires communication between and among the local society, governments
and specialists. The peoples and governments of Shanxi, Shaanxi and Inner
Mongolia have accumulated much experience in the conservation of water and
soil and in combatting sand problems. Moreover, not only the local knowledge,
but also the availability of a labour force with a desire to achieve upward
economic-environmental mobility is a great asset.
The Chinese Government has formulated special policies,
laws and plans for the Shanxi-Shaanxi-Inner Mongolia Energy Resources Base
for the protection of the environment and investment in environmentally
sound mining technologies. It issued a specific control and management plan
for water and soil conservation in the Loess Plateau Region of the Yellow
River Valley, for water and soil conservation in coal mining, and for the
provision of jobs for the poorest households.
Since the 1952, organizations such as the Chinese
Academy of Sciences have analyzed energy resources and the problem of environmental
protection. The State Council has instructed the State Planning Commission
to head the formulation of the overall plan for the development, management
and environmental protection of the Shanxi-Shaanxi-Inner Mongolia Energy
Resources Base. The Asian Development Bank has sponsored a technical assistance
project for remote monitoring and management of the fragile environment
in the contiguous area of Shanxi, Shaanxi and Inner Mongolia. This project
has produced a preliminarily geographic information system.
2. Objectives
Long-term Objectives
- To reverse the downward spiral of impoverishment
and environmental degradation through land reclamation and environmentally
sound, small-scale coal mining.
Immediate Objectives
- To complete an environmental impact assessment
and to draft specialized plans under the general Plan for the Development,
Management and Environmental Protection of the Shanxi- Shaanxi-Inner Mongolia
Energy Resources Base.
- To establish pilot zones for study and demonstration
of specialized environmental management techniques.
- To implement management and control activities
in key mining districts, with the Ulan Moron River area as the initial
area for development.
3. Activities
3.1 Formulate an overall and specialized plan for
the development, management and environmental protection of the Shanxi-Shaanxi-Inner
Mongolia Energy Resources Base.
- Improve the monitoring and management information
system for the Shanxi-Shaanxi-Inner Mongolia region.
- Conduct an environmental impact assessment.
- Evaluate water resources and plan for their rational
use.
- Formulate a development plan.
- Plan for disaster prevention and relief.
- Develop specialized plans for coal extraction,
water and soil conservation, ecological construction, communication and
transportation.
The duration of this activity will be one year.
3.2 Establish exemplary zones for the study and
demonstration of specialized environmental management techniques.
- Establish Daliuta in Shenmu County as an exemplary
zone for the study and demonstration of environmental management and disaster
relief techniques.
- Designate the Ejin Horo experimental exemplary
zone as a model for sand control techniques and fine variety selection
of trees and grasses.
- Establish the Dongsheng experimental exemplary
zone to demonstrate reclamation techniques, fine variety selection and
the introduction of vegetables and cattle.
- Environmental and economic knowledge, perceptions
and interests of the target groups will be studied and used to ensure participation
in all stages of the projects.
The duration of this activity will be 5 years.
3.3 Engage in Environmental Control and Management
and Regional Development of the Ulan Moron River.
- Forests, grassland and vegetation
- Cultivate a model windbreak and sand-break forest zone of 264 km2 on
the windward side at the northern margin of the mining district.
- Build a windbreak and sand-binder zone of 170 km2 in the Ulan Moron and
Hoh Usu wind gap areas to protect the mining clusters on the banks of the
Ulan Moron River.
- Afforest 154 km2 and beautify the two flanks of the Ulan Moron River,
from the Dianta bridge to the Gongneergai gully.
- Cultivate scattered forest and grassland in accordance with either loess
and sandy hill areas, for water, soil or sand conservation.
- Knowledge, perceptions and interests of target groups will be included
to ensure participation in projects.
- River renovation work
- Construct the Zhuanlongwan reservoir, with a storage capacity of 4.4x108
m3. This reservoir can prevent floods, mud and sand dispersion and protect
lower reaches. This capacity combined with twelve smaller reservoirs will
provide a total water supply capacity of 6.969x107 m3.
- Construct flood control embankments over 173.65 km, and mid-channel renovation
work over 2.5 km.
- Increase farmland by 1.622x10 5 mu.
- Control and manage farmland in accordance with local conditions.
- Terrace or embank fields in loess hill areas.
- Cultivate small stretches of paddy fields in sandy hill areas.
- Research results will be employed in carrying out this fundamental farmland
development.
- The knowledge, perceptions and interests of target groups will be incorporated
to ensure their participation in projects.
The duration of this activity will be 10 years.
- Mining district reclamation and off-scum disposal.
- Abandoned pits from shaft mining will be filled mechanically and trees
and grass will be grown.
- Abandoned open-pit mines will be filled through dumping external waste.
- Excavation, stripping, reclamation, tree and grass cultivation will be
advanced concurrently.
- Knowledge, perceptions and interests of target groups will be utilized
in carrying out these activities.
- Control of air pollution.
- Coal smoke pollution will be controlled and managed.
- Dust pollution caused by coal production storage and transportation will
be controlled and managed.
- Knowledge, perceptions and interests of target groups will be used in
carrying out these projects.
The duration of this activity will be 10 years.
The agencies involved will be the National Environmental
Protection Agency, the Ministry of Water Resources, the Ministry of Construction,
the Ministry of Geology and Mineral Resources, the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
the State Education Commission, and relevant local Governments, all under
the direction of the State Planning Commission and State Science and Technology
Commission. The Huaneng Float Coal Corporation will be responsible for repaying
the loans.
4. Inputs
International cooperation and support is required
for the sustainable development of the Jinshanmen region. Its coal resources
can help increase the energy supply and improve the quality of the environment
in China and the East Asia region. Advanced technologies to be accessed
from foreign countries are: environmental impact assessment, environmental
management, human habitation planning, environment control and management,
off-scum disposal and land reclamation. Funds are required for environmental
control and management. Thus far, the concerted efforts of the governments,
people and enterprises are still far from reversing the downward cycle of
impoverishment and degradation.
Budget (in million US dollars)
Activity  |
Chinese Inputs  |
International Inputs 
Grant Soft-loan  |
Total  |
| 3.1 |
2.00 |
1.00 1.00  |
4.00 |
| 3.2 |
4.00 |
2.00 2.00  |
8.00 |
| 3.3 |
14.14 |
4.38 9.76  |
28.28 |
| Total |
20.14 |
7.38 12.76  |
40.28 |
5. Benefits
Through the construction of forests, grassland,
vegetation and fundamental farmland development, soil erosion will be reduced
by 65 percent, the forest or grass coverage rate will reach 55.7 percent,
and agriculture will develop. The per capita grain yield will reach 445
kilograms and the per capita net income will reach 1,000 RMB, contributing
to the abatement of poverty.
By the year 2005, the total amount of coal production
will reach 108 million tons of coal to support the economic development
of China. Minor coal-pits which endanger the environment will be closed.
The improved exploitation of energy resources will help the eastern part
of China.
Text Browser Utilities: [Back, ACCA21 Home]

For more information about ACCA21
contact:
web@acca21.edu.cn
Address: 109 Wanquanhe Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100089, People's
Republic of China
Telephone: +86-10-82636193, +86-10-82634400 Ext.2401
Fax: +86-10-82636192
|