China Vows To Adapt Better To Climate Change

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2022-06-14 HKT 11:55

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  • A policy document says China needs to take action to optimise its farming and switch to higher-yield crops. File photo: AFP

    A policy document says China needs to take action to optimise its farming and switch to higher-yield crops. File photo: AFP

China's economy and society are at increasing risk from climate change and the country needs to improve adaptation mechanisms and monitoring capabilities at every level of government, according to a new policy document.

"Climate change has already brought serious adverse impacts to China's natural ecological system, and has continued to spread and penetrate into economy and society," the authorities said in its national climate change adaptation strategy published late on Monday.

Climate change was not only creating long-term challenges but also made the mainland more vulnerable to "sudden and extreme" events. Transmissible diseases, pests, and extreme weather were also an increasing danger to public health, the document said.

Vegetation belts have also shifted northwards, and China needs to take action to "optimise" its farming and switch to higher-yield and more stress-resistant crops, it added.

The document said the government would modernise its climate-related disaster prevention systems and reduce the vulnerability of the economy as well as its natural ecosystems.

Beijing will also aim to build a nationwide climate impact and risk assessment system by 2035, and will require major projects to include climate in environmental impact assessments, as well as boost its early-warning capabilities.

Melting permafrost, retreating glaciers and expanding ice lakes have already disrupted water supplies, and rising coastal sea levels have also raised flooding risks, the document warned.

It said it would strengthen monitoring at rivers and lakes to boost flood control and improve water supply security. It will also reform water prices and impose binding consumption targets in key regions.

It aims to cut water intensity – the amount used per unit of economic growth – by 16 percent over 2021-2025. (Reuters)

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