Home>News Center>China
       
 

NGOs unite to protect environment
By Sun Xiaohua (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-11-10 05:51

Domestic and foreign entrepreneurs have teamed up to protect Inner Mongolia's biodiversity.

The combining of international forces was announced at the Asia-Pacific Meeting of US-based group Nature Conservancy (TNC) in Beijing yesterday.

At the meeting, TNC and China's Alxa SEE (Society, Entrepreneur and Ecology) Ecological Association expressed their willingness to co-operate in protecting biodiversity in the autonomous region's Alxa League.

"Although TNC focuses on the protection of biodiversity, while our association puts its major efforts into control of desertification (in Alxa), our aim of achieving harmony between humans and nature is the same," said Liu Xiaoguang, president of the Alxa SEE association.

"We hope we can learn from TNC how to better protect biodiversity in Alxa League."

An environmental non-governmental organization (NGO), the Alxa SEE Ecological Association was founded last year by nearly 100 entrepreneurs.

TNC was founded in 1951 to preserve plants, animals and natural communities by protecting the environments they need to survive. It now works in 28 countries.

Having already collected donations of about 100 million yuan (US$12 million) from its members, the Alxa SEE association is carrying out desertification control, forestry protection and alternative energy development projects.

Desertification in Alxa is a prime cause of the sandstorms which hit Beijing every spring.

"The reasons for setting up the association are very simple," said Victor Wang, a board member of the association and CEO of Gwcom Inc.

"First, Beijing has been plagued by sandstorms every year. If the capital's sky is blue, it is a very beautiful city. But when the sandstorms come, it really disturbs our lives," Wang said.

"We want to pay back society. Environment protection is a major concern for China."

According to Su Ming, deputy director of the Ministry of Forestry's International Forestry Co-operation Centre, NGOs will play an increasingly important role in protecting China's ecology.

"The government wants to expand co-operation with non-governmental organizations to better the environment," he said. "We hope an effective partnership can be forged between the government, non-governmental organizations and entrepreneurs."

(China Daily 11/10/2005 page3)



Hu, Blair meet in London
Hostages in Zhengzhou rescued
1,500 shells unearthed in Changchun
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

2 Chinese among 57 killed in Jordan hotel bombings

 

   
 

Blair: China's rapid development not a threat

 

   
 

New outbreaks reported, 'situation serious'

 

   
 

China: Little progress on N. Korea talks

 

   
 

Panel urges US-China energy cooperation

 

   
 

Hostage stand-off ends in suicide blast

 

   
  Six-Party Talks resume; differences remain
   
  Bush: US-China ties 'important' and 'good'
   
  China to encourage compact cars: NDRC
   
  Most Chinese unsatisfied with sex lives
   
  Banks uncover 894 corruption cases
   
  China to produce Tamiflu if bird flu spreads
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement