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US$60 Billion Earmarked for Environmental Protection in China's West

The central government has vowed to attract heavy investment into environmental protection work and development in its vast western regions, following Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin's call to build China into a "well-off'' society within two decades.

The government plans to invest more than 500 billion yuan (US$60.5 billion) in planting trees and restoring grasslands in its 12 western provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities by 2010, said Li Zibin, vice-minister of the State Development Planning Commission.

"Such great efforts to improve ecology are rare in the world and will consequently go down the history,'' Li, also vice-director of the Western Development Office under the State Council, told a press conference held yesterday at the Party congress.

Li said environmental protection is the most urgent task for the development of the west regions, and is a concern of the whole Chinese nation.

The ambitious ecological protection plan is part of the government's "go-west'' campaign, which was launched in 1999 to jump-start the economy and improve the environment of the western regions.

The west is rich in natural resources, spans almost three fourths of the nation's territory and is home to one-fourth of its population. But its gross domestic product (GDP) only accounts for 40 percent of that of the booming eastern regions.

Li said the government has invested a lot in building roads, railways, power grids, oil pipelines and airports in the area, to create a better environment to attract more investment.

The vice-minister hosted the conference yesterday with leaders from four western regions: Tibet and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions, Shaanxi Province and Chongqing Municipality.

(China Daily November 13, 2002)