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Wednesday, June 22, 2005

De-dusting Mongolia?

Excerpted from an interesting article by Dave Roberts in Grist Magazine on "the biggest ecological project the world has ever seen."

His article in turn is excerpted from New Scientist, a subscription only magazine.

Every spring, winds kick up and start blowing dust off the plains of Inner Mongolia and northwestern China. This is a natural event -- been going on for millions of years -- but overgrazing and deforestation have dramatically increased the amount of dust and the damage it does:

Dust storms cause destruction on the scale of a serious earthquake. They can kill people and livestock, destroy crops, and force whole communities to abandon their homes.

With dust-laden winds blowing at up to 100 kilometres per hour, people in large parts of China stay indoors with the windows firmly shut for weeks on end during spring.

In Korea and Japan, dust blown from China has closed airports, turned the rain brown and choked rivers and lakes with algal blooms. It has even found its way across the Pacific to hang as an orange haze over Colorado. China's dustbowl is becoming a global problem.

In the 70s the Chinese government planted thousands of trees to form a "great green wall" to stop the dust. It didn't really work, and in some cases did more harm than good.

They then tried relocating nomadic families with large herds of grazing goats or covering the ground with straw mats or chemical glues. These didn't really work either.

In 2003, an international plan was devised:

... the project team has identified four target areas in China, four in Mongolia and one straddling the border.

In each, measures will be tailored to the specific type of landscape. Dry grassland areas will be reseeded and fenced off, and fodder plantations will be planted to feed livestock that formerly grazed there.

In more mountainous regions, Chinese pine will be planted, and solar and wind energy will replace wood-burning as a source of energy.

To compensate for lost farmland, new, more environmentally-friendly industries are proposed, including dairy farming, growing ginseng, selling sustainably grown willow cane to the paper industry, and ecotourism. In the cross-border project, a high-tech nursery and training centre will support efforts to reinstate the grasslands, and a sustainable forest irrigated with waste water will provide a model for future shelter-belt efforts.

I'll be looking forward to hearing more about this.

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1 Comments:

At 6:44 AM, Blogger kenju said...

If it is so dry in the grasslands as to allow dust to form, how can the grass be kept alive? Seems that there would never be enough rain to keep the soil in place.

 

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