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Corporate Social Responsibility
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1.21.2008 - 09:00am ET
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China Faces Reign of Sand: Circle of Blue Reports on Inner Mongolia's Expanding Desert
Collaborative journalism project covers front lines of global water crisis
(CSRwire) INNER MONGOLIA, CHINA - January 21, 2008 – Furious dust and sandstorms
from Inner Mongolia cripple airports, darken skies, and choke millions of
people across East Asia every spring. According to "Reign of Sand," the
new multimedia report from Circle of Blue, the storms are
growing in intensity and frequency, and the primary causes are deepening
drought in northern China and the mismanagement of the largest grasslands
on earth.
"It's much more than a landscape surrendering to the sand," said J. Carl
Ganter, director of Circle of Blue, the journalism-based news, science and
collaborative project covering water issues worldwide. "We're looking at a
crucial international economic and environmental story that has
implications for us all."
As China prepares for the Summer Olympic Games in August, international
focus on its air pollution is increasing. The main target is to reduce
urban smog from car and coal emissions, but China's sand storms are an
equal threat to air quality and human health. They are often driven by 80
mile-per-hour winds that last for days. These storms, along with the water
shortages and the land degradation causing them, underscore the extreme
stress that China's economic development is putting on its environment and
its 1.3 billion people.
"Reign of Sand" comes as China's spring dust storms approach. Scientists
say the severity and frequency of the dust storms reflect worsening
conditions: Dryer climate, stronger winds, water shortages, over-grazing,
population growth, and a clash between nomadic herders and the government
over range and farmland management.
Part of a global water crisis
Globally, the UN estimates that two-thirds of the world's population will
live in areas of water stress within the next 20 years. The consequences
are ominous. One of every three people on the planet lives without
adequate clean water or sanitation. Some 6,000 people, mostly children,
die each day from preventable, water-related diseases. And water has
become an axis issue, intersecting civilization's greatest challenges –
poverty, health, economic development, climate, immigration, and financial
and environmental security, to name a few.
In the first decade of the 21st century, more than 20 storms a year were
able to bring life to a near standstill in Beijing and other regions of
China, North Korea and South Korea—five times as many storms as occurred
in the 1950s.
Typical is what happened early last April when the people of Liaoning and
Shandong provinces in northeastern China—an area roughly the size of New
Mexico and home to 130 million—awoke to the sound of grating winds and
scratchy veils of dust that hung in their homes. Outside, yellow clouds of
sand darkened the streets, and dust was so thick that residents were forced
to stay indoors.
Circle of Blue reports that the steady desertification of Inner Mongolia
is an important factor in steadily pushing an Asian Sahara of sand closer
to Beijing, blackening the sky, and producing environmental refugees and
social unrest in Inner Mongolia and throughout China.
While many finance theorists predict that China may become the preeminent
industrialized nation this century, environmental economists say China is
outrunning the capacity of its natural resources to sustain such rapid
development, and could instead experience a frightening ecological
collapse.
As recently as the 1960s, according to estimates by the Chinese
environmental agency, almost three-quarters of Inner Mongolia was grass.
The province's thin soil, 15 inches of annual rainfall, and nomadic
herders supported one of the planet’s most robust wild ranges, a grass
ecosystem that stretched 1,500 miles east to west and more than 600 miles
north to south in some places, nearly twice as large as France.
No longer. According to estimates by the United Nations, since 1980 desert
has claimed 2 million acres of cropland, nearly 6 million acres of
rangeland, and 16 million acres of forests in northern China, an area
equivalent in size to Kentucky.
"These challenges are formidable, but we're at a rare point in history
when we can meld the expertise and enthusiasm of the world's finest
creative and scientific talents to inform and design solutions," Ganter
said. “This report underscores the power of exceptional storytelling to
engage the public and policy makers in the critical decisions of our time.
Where there is the will, there is a way."
At a Glance
Desertification in Inner Mongolia
The province's thin soil, 15 inches of rainfall annually, and
nomadic herders once supported one of the planet's most robust wild
ranges, a grass ecosystem nearly twice as large as France.
Since 1980 desert has claimed 2 million acres of cropland, nearly 6
million acres of rangeland, and 16 million acres of forests in northern
China.
The steady desertification of northern China has put the world's
fastest growing economy, and 500 million people at risk of sand storms,
health effects caused by blowing sand, and food shortages prompted by
severe drought and water mismanagement.
China planted a 74 million-acre "Great Green Wall" of trees, 2,800
miles long stretching from the northeast, through Inner Mongolia to
Xinjiang in the far west. The desert is killing the trees.
Full multimedia coverage is online at http://www.circleofblue.org
Expanded release, photographs and resources:
http://www.circleofblue.org/news
Contact
Circle of Blue
Keith Schneider, senior editor
media@circleofblue.org
+1.202.351-6870 x130
www.circleofblue.org
Wilson Center - China Environment Forum
Jennifer Turner
cef@wilsoncenter.org
+1.202-691-4233
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/cef
Pacific Institute
press@pacinst.org
+1.510-251-1600
www.pacinst.org
www.worldwater.org
(statistics, water issues, policy)
Available media
B-Roll, high-resolution photographs, audio and video interviews
http://www.circleofblue.org/media_center
Eric Daigh
eric@circleofblue.org
+1.202.351-6870 x115
Credits
Video and multimedia
Eric Daigh
Stories and field reporting
W. Chad Futrell
Photographs
Palani Mohan/Getty Images for Circle of Blue
Research assistance
Jennifer Turner and Linden Ellis
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars China Environment
Forum
Visuals editing
Karen Mullarkey
Senior editor
Keith Schneider
Narration and scripts
Eileen E Ganter
About
Circle of Blue
Founded by leading journalists and scientists and based on the shores of
the Great Lakes, Circle of Blue pioneers communications and information
technology, informing decision making with original front-line reporting,
dynamic data spaces and engaging social media. Circle of Blue is a
nonprofit independent journalism project of the Pacific Institute. It was
featured recently at the Aspen Ideas Festival and the Clinton
Global Initiative.
Pacific Institute
The Pacific Institute is dedicated to protecting our natural world,
encouraging sustainable development, and improving global security. Based
in Oakland, California, the Institute uses interdisciplinary analysis in
order to develop real-world solutions to problems like water shortages,
habitat destruction, global warming, and environmental injustice. Founded
in 1982, the Institute celebrated its 20th Anniversary in 2007.
Partners
Circle of Blue partners announced at the Clinton Global Initiative include
the international photojournalism agency Contact Press Images; the
Environmental Change and Security Program and China Environment Forum at
the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; exhibit firm
Evergreen Exhibitions; acclaimed artist Greg Mort; SustainAbility, the
global independent consultancy for corporate responsibility and
sustainability; and Sea Studios Foundation, producer of the PBS series,
"Strange Days on Planet Earth." Also included are Getty Images and Magnum
Photos Foundation, and Globescan, the international public opinion and
research firm. Circle of Blue is only possible through the generous
financial support of individuals, foundations and companies. info@circleofblue.org
Expert Comments
(high-resolution video available via ftp)
"I think that water pollution could very well be the catalyst that will
enable people to push for greater change in the political system, for
getting a cleaner environment.... When the water's gone, life's gone."
Dr. Jennifer Turner
Director, China Environment Forum
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
"Ultimately, numbers don't tell the story as well as pictures do, as well
as stories do. And I think one of the challenges for water experts, or for
policy makers, is in fact not to tell the story in numbers but to convert
the numbers into things people really care about. to figure out a way to
make 1.1 billion people without safe water something that means something
more clearly to people, that people really care about, that in fact is not
a number like 1.1 billion, but is a family that has a sick child. Or a girl
who can't go to school because she has to spend three or four hours a day
walking miles to collect water that may not even be safe enough to drink.
So ultimately it's not about the numbers, it's about the human aspects of
water that are going to really convince people to take action, that are
going top really convince policy makers to move forward."
Peter Gleick
President
Pacific Institute
Learn more - Aspen Environment Forum
Learn more about these and other crucial environment issues – and hear
more from Circle of Blue's team – at the first ever Aspen Institute
Aspen Environment Forum – a powerful, three-day exchange examining the
future of our shared environment, March 26-29, 2008.
www.aspeninstitute.org
Links and Resources
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars China Environment
Forum
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/cef
Pacific Institute - The World's Water
http://www.worldwater.org
Pacific Institute - At the Crest of a Wave: A Proactive Approach to
Corporate Water Strategy
Pacific Institute: A
Proactive Approache to Corporate Water Strategy
World Economic Forum – Water Initiative
http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/water/index.htm
Clinton Global Initiative
http://www.clintonglobalinitiative.org
National Assessment of the Impacts of Climate Variability and Change http://www.pacinst.org/reports/national_assessment
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Environmental Change and Security Program, "Navigating Peace"
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/water
Navigating Peace multimedia "Water Stories"
http://www.wilsoncenter.org/waterstories
China Environment Forum - Circle of Blue
Developing
water stories in China: "Driving into the Ocean of Sand"
Great Lakes at risk
Great Lakes
shrinking?
New York Times Sunday Magazine
The
Perfect Drought
For Journalists covering water
The Poynter Institute - News University, "Covering Water Quality"
Covering
Water Quality
Society of Environmental Journalists – Resources
SEJ
Resources
Michigan State University Knight Center for Environmental Journalism
http://ej.msu.edu/resources.php
U.S. Drought Monitor
U.S.
Drought Monitor
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