日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

Photo

Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-12-05 18:53
Large Medium Small

Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life
The file photo of July 12, 2007 shows the view of a forest by Ergune River at the foot of Dahinggan Mountains, in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. [Agencies]

HARBIN: In the forest in Dahinggan Mountains in the northernmost part of China, Wang Shilin cooked potatoes with an iron pot and a stove burning coal.

The 39-year-old woodchopper had never thought he would one day cook without wood. He had been chopping down tree until the end of 2006, when the local government started to encourage residents to cook with coal instead of the wood.

Dahinggan Prefecture in Heilongjiang Province is a traditional source of timber since 1964 with more than 78 percent of the land covered with forest. The ecological benefits from the 6.56 million hectares of forest amount to 116.3 billion yuan (US$17 billion) through carbon sinks, oxygen production and others, official statistics show.

However, the mature forest shrank from 780 million cubic meters in the 1960s to 60 million cubic meters in 2008 due to decades of lumbering. The areas of wetlands and grasslands have reduced 50 to 60 percent.

 Full Coverage:
Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life Copenhagen Summit

Related readings:
Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life Low-carbon lifestyle fashionable
Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life 500,000 Chinese sign to support low-carbon lifestyles
Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life China's carbon cut 'voluntary action': experts
Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life Low carbon conference held in Nanchang

Chinese woodchoppers' low-carbon life China urges EU to cut more carbon

The prefecture government raised more than 100 million yuan in 2006 to launch the "coal replacing wood" project, providing the local residents with free coal and stoves. Hundreds of thousands of woodchoppers like Wang benefited from this project.

"At the beginning, I was reluctant to cook with coal,"  said Wang. "I have logged for the country for decades, isn't it a natural thing for us to burn the wood?"

"They (local officials) asked me how would our grandchildren live if we chop down all the woods, and I realized maybe I was wrong," he said.

More than 1 million cubic meters of timber could be saved each year by the project, almost equivalent to the upper limit of lumbering.

As burning coal still causes pollution, the government is now promoting the use of gas.

In the neighboring forest in the Xiaohinggan Mountains, 1,700 km away from the capital Beijing, local residents began using bio-gas.

"I did not know who invented this. Straw, sawdust and cornstalk can all be transformed to gas," said Liu Yuanfa, 55, a former woodman at the Meixi forestry bureau, while switching on the stove.

The gas was from a blue gas tank, which is six meters high and 400 cubic meters in volume and provides gas for 164 households.

"Burning 200 kg bio-waste can fill up the gas tank with inflammable gas, which only costs 10 kilowatt-hour of electricity but can satisfy the needs of all the households for three to four days," said Teng Yincai, the only staff at the gas supply station.

"It was built by a company from Shandong Province. I just put the bio-waste into the machine and the computer managed everything else,"  he said.

   Previous Page 1 2 Next Page  

主站蜘蛛池模板: 午夜影院一区 | 性欧美又大又长又硬 | 久久网免费视频 | 五月天综合 | 99免费在线 | 精品久久网 | 警花观音坐莲激情销魂小说 | 亚洲男人在线天堂 | 国产精品高潮呻吟久久av野狼 | 亚洲自拍偷拍视频 | 五月婷婷丁香综合 | 成人激情视频在线播放 | 操夜夜 | 麻豆福利在线 | 超污网站在线观看 | 亚洲天堂777| 国产精品成人在线观看 | 激情综合一区二区三区 | 69久久精品| 国产成人综合在线 | 国产在线不卡av | 亚洲激情综合 | 丝瓜av| 一级特黄aa大片欧美 | 中文字幕一二三四区 | 午夜一级大片 | 日本wwwwww | 亚洲人成在线播放 | 亚日韩av| 天天干视频在线观看 | 超碰自拍| 佳佳黑色脚footjob调教 | 成年人的视频 | 欧美一级特黄视频 | 免费看的毛片 | 亚洲九九视频 | 国产视频导航 | 99热官网| 国产精品成人一区 | 日韩一区二区三区在线观看视频 | 成人在线观看一区 |