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Grasslands of China

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Grassland accounts for China’s largest land resource, covering nearly 41 percent of the national land area. Grassland in the Chinese context comprises widely varying eco-types ranging from the meadows and forest steppes of former Manchuria in the Northeast; and the high, alpine pastures of the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau; to the (semi)arid steppes and deserts in China’s Great West.[1] Due to this geographical and ecological variety, the utilization of grassland is not limited to grazing and forage production, but extends to the exploitation of grassland and forest by-products, as well as the exploitation of mineral resources. Of the total of around 393 million hectares of grassland in China, 84 percent or 331 million hectares is deemed usable for grazing.[1]

Degradation

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In the arid and semi-arid regions, large tracts of grassland consist of steppe, semi-desert or desert, with low or very low forage production. It is believed that a major proportion of China’s grasslands have been degraded or desertified to varying degrees.[2] A variety of causes for grassland degradation has been identified, which include overgrazing, overpopulation, mining, agricultural reclamation, pests and rodents, geophysical change, climate change and variability.[3] It needs to be noted that there is contention about the extent to which degradation has taken or is taking place.[4] Some have also posited that Chinese statistics over grassland degradation are politicized and need reinterpretation in the light of larger ethnic, geo-political and strategic interests.[5] In this regard, non-equilibrium range ecology posits that under conditions of high precipitation variability, the human factor becomes secondary to abiotic factors in influencing desertification and grassland degradation.[6]

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Grasslands were legally made public property during the Land Reform in the 1950s, albeit without an existing definition of what constitutes public ownership, and only well after the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution were grasslands redefined as state-owned in the 1982 constitution.[7] Further grassland reform came as part of the 1980s market reform, which started in the rural agricultural areas, but also included rangelands through a controversial path of privatizing grazing animals and the use rights of state-owned pastures.[8] Although currently the Chinese state nationalized grasslands, their ownership is still claimed by the collectives, while the mining of the grasslands’ subsoil resources has remained a Daedalean collusion of state, collective and private interests.[9]

Grassland policies

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Pasture Household Contract Responsibility System

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The 1985 Rangeland Law defined the Pasture Household Contract Responsibility System (short: the Pasture Contract System) under which individuals and collectives could contract collective or state rangeland.[10] The Ministry of Agriculture envisioned four different stages in putting the pasture contract system into effect:[11]

1. The distribution of animals that were formerly owned by the collective to individual households.

2. The assessment, or in some cases re-assessment, of range boundaries between collectives and the consequent allocation of rangeland user rights to collectives and households.

3. The appraisal of the pastures in terms of carrying capacities or stocking rates.

4. The implementation of a legal system of incentives and penalties to ensure that producers abide by the carrying capacities of the plots of land assigned to them, and the establishment of a supervisory institutional structure to enforce the legal rules and regulations.

While these guidelines exist on paper, scholars have questioned the actual practice of the Pasture Contract System.[9] Longworth and Williamson for instance noted that the policy does not exist at the village and household level.[12] It is also found that as long as state and collective ownership of rangeland, and the level of collective ownership are not clarified, the consistency of the pasture contract system is jeopardized.[13] In response to the implementation difficulties of the pasture contract system, scholars and officials within the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture have suggested that the responsibility of management and control for rangelands should be vested in the collective, be it the administrative or natural village, or smaller traditional social groups.[14]

Resettlement of Nomads

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The management of grassland frequently reaches into the socioeconomic sphere, in China and elsewhere, touching on matters of regional planning and the sedentarization of nomadic people and pastoralists.[15] The sedentarization of nomadic herders (dingju youmumin) should not be confused with the term 'ecological resettlement' (shengtai yimin), that has often been used interchangeably.[16][17] In a policy document of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDCR), it was stated that: "By settling nomads one can improve their production and living standards, and promote economic growth and social development of the ethnic regions, in order to […] expel social unrest, and maintain ethnic unity and stability of the border areas".[18] This example shows that aside from nature conservation and environmental protection, grassland policies often simultaneously serve wider interests.[9]

Grazing Ban

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According to numerous government reports, China’s grasslands are suffering from serious overgrazing, leading to degradation and desertification.[19] In response to this, the state has issued a strict prohibition on grazing where pastoralism and livestock farmers are prohibited from grazing livestock on grassland in place of stall-feeding. To compensate for the loss of income, herders are entitled to subsidies based on a flat rate of 6 RMB per mu of pasture. The Grazing Ban was adopted as national policy for the first time in 2000[20] and later encoded in the revised Grassland Law in 2002 (article 35, section 2). In following years, the Grazing Ban was merged with additional programs including the ‘Herds for Grass Program’ (in 2005) and the ‘Payment for Grassland Services’ (2011). Due to the Grazing Ban’s merging with other policies, there is considerable confusion regarding its relation with the Herds for Grass Program (of which it is a part) and the Payment for Grassland Services (to which it is an addition).[9]

The Grazing Ban and its implementation have been received in overly negative terms. With only a few exceptions, the Grazing Ban has been unfavorably evaluated by a variety of studies. Reasons for failure include the ill-adapted nature to ecological realities of the pastoral area[21][22] and its commandist or top-down manner of implementation.[23][24] Other problems are found in the administration, standards and payment of subsidies,[25][26] along with rent-seeking by local cadres and adverse effects on income and livelihood.[27] It is found that the ban has a lack of credibility and has been subject to rural disobedience through clandestine grazing during the night or at remote locations.[22]

References

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  1. ^ a b National Bureau of Statistics. "China statistical yearbook 2011". Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  2. ^ Squires, Victor; et al. (2009). Rangeland degradation and recovery in China's pastoral lands ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Wallingford, UK: CABI. ISBN 9781845934965.
  3. ^ Ho, Peter; Azadi, Hossein (April 2010). "Rangeland degradation in North China: Perceptions of pastoralists". Environmental Research. 110 (3): 302–307. Bibcode:2010ER....110..302H. doi:10.1016/j.envres.2009.12.007. PMID 20106474.
  4. ^ Zhao, Heng; Gao, Guiying; Ho, Peter. "China's desertification deconstructed: Towards a scientists' model based on long term perceptions of grassland restoration (1995-2011)". Restoration Ecology. forthcoming. 25.
  5. ^ Banks, Tony (December 2003). "Property Rights Reform in Rangeland China: Dilemmas On the Road to the Household Ranch". World Development. 31 (12): 2129–2142. doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2003.06.010.
  6. ^ Ho, P. (2001). "Rangeland Degradation in North China Revisited? A Preliminary Statistical Analysis to Validate Non-Equilibrium Range Ecology". The Journal of Development Studies. 37 (3): 99–133. doi:10.1080/00220380412331321991. ISSN 0022-0388. S2CID 154397243.
  7. ^ Ho, Peter (2005). Institutions in transition land ownership, property rights, and social conflict in China (Reprint. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199280698.
  8. ^ Yeh, Emily T. (January 2005). "Green Governmentality and Pastoralism in Western China: 'Converting Pastures to Grasslands'". Nomadic Peoples. 9 (1): 9–30. doi:10.3167/082279405781826164.
  9. ^ a b c d Ho, Peter (2016). "Empty institutions, non-credibility and pastoralism: China's grazing ban, mining and ethnicity". The Journal of Peasant Studies. 43 (6): 1145–1176. doi:10.1080/03066150.2016.1239617. S2CID 157632052.
  10. ^ Ho, Peter (2000). "China's Rangelands under Stress: A Comparative Study of Pasture Commons in the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region". Development and Change. 31 (2): 385–412. doi:10.1111/1467-7660.00159. S2CID 154437870. SSRN 2168745.
  11. ^ Committee on Scholarly Communication with the People's Republic of China (CSCPRC) (1992). Grasslands and Grassland Sciences in Northern China. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.
  12. ^ J., Williamson, Gregory (1993). China's pastoral region : sheep and wool, minority nationalities, rangeland degradation and sustainable development. CAB International. ISBN 978-0851988900. OCLC 471680656.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Ho, Peter (2000). "The Clash over State and Collective Property: The Making of the Rangeland Law*". The China Quarterly. 161: 240–263. doi:10.1017/S030574100000401X. ISSN 1468-2648. S2CID 9640318.
  14. ^ Ho, P. (2001-02-01). "Rangeland Degradation in North China Revisited? A Preliminary Statistical Analysis to Validate Non-Equilibrium Range Ecology". The Journal of Development Studies. 37 (3): 99–133. doi:10.1080/00220380412331321991. ISSN 0022-0388. S2CID 154397243.
  15. ^ Ho, Peter (2000). "The Myth of Desertification at China's Northwestern Frontier: The Case of Ningxia Province, 1929-1958". Modern China. 26 (3): 348–395. doi:10.1177/009770040002600304. ISSN 0097-7004. S2CID 83080752.
  16. ^ Du, Fachun (2012). "Ecological Resettlement of Tibetan Herders in the Sanjiangyuan: A Case Study in Madoi County of Qinghai". Nomadic Peoples. 16 (1): 116–133. doi:10.3167/np.2012.160109.
  17. ^ Zhou, Decheng; Zhao, Shuqing; Zhu, Chao (2012). "The Grain for Green Project induced land cover change in the Loess Plateau: A case study with Ansai County, Shanxi Province, China". Ecological Indicators. 23: 88–94. doi:10.1016/j.ecolind.2012.03.021.
  18. ^ National Development and Reform Commission, Ministry of Housing and Rural-Urban Construction, and Ministry of Agriculture (September 28, 2012). Quanguo youmumin dingju gongcheng jianshe ' shi'erwu' guihua [Construction project for the nation-wide settlement of nomadic pastoralists under the 12th Five Year Plan]. Beijing: National Development and Reform Commission. Document number 000013039-2012-03599. pp. 10–11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ Harris, R. B. (2010). "Rangeland degradation on the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau: A review of the evidence of its magnitude and causes". Journal of Arid Environments. 74 (1): 1–12. Bibcode:2010JArEn..74....1H. doi:10.1016/j.jaridenv.2009.06.014.
  20. ^ State Council (November 28, 2000). Quanguo shengtai baohu gangyao [National outline of ecological and environmental protection].
  21. ^ Song, N. (2004). "Jinmu zhengce ji qi xiaoying fenxi [An analysis of the Grazing Ban policy and its effects]". Ziran Ziyuan Xuebao. 19 (3): 316–23.
  22. ^ a b Qi, G; Hu, X (2006). "Caochang jinmu zhengce xia de nongmin fangmu xingwei yanjiu – yi Ningxia Yanchi xian de diaocha wei li' [A study of farmers' grazing behaviour under the grasslands grazing ban policy – A case study of Yanchi County in Ningxia]". Zhongguo Nongye Daxue Xuebao (Shehui Kexueban) 63. 63 (2): 12–16.
  23. ^ Chen, J; Su, Y (2008). "Jinmu dui nongmu jiaocuodai nonghu shengchan he shengji de yingxiang – dui Ningxia Yanchi xian liang xiang si cun bashi ge nonghe de diaocha [Impact of the Grazing Ban on farmers' production and livelihoods in the agro-pastoral region – Research on 80 farm households in 4 villages and 2 townships in Yanchi County, Ningxia]". Nongye Jingji Wenti. 6: 73–79.
  24. ^ Wang, H (November 23, 2010). "Xianyou zhengce daduo pingjia fumian, caoyuan guanli buneng 'yi dao qie' [Existing policies mostly receive a negative evaluation, grassland management cannot be 'one size fits all']". Kexue Shibao.
  25. ^ Li (2011). "Nongmu jianying tixi yu Qingzang Gaoyuan caoyuan de kechixu liyong [Agro-pastoral systems and the sustainable use of grasslands at the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau]". Yuanshengtai Minzu Wenhua Xuekan. 3 (1): 15–21.
  26. ^ Li, X. "Tuimu huancao xiangmu dui Neimenggu mumin shouyi yingxiang de shizheng yanjiu [Empirical research of the impact of Grain-for-Grass project on herders' revenues in Inner Mongolia]". Nongye Jishu Jingji. 3: 63–68.
  27. ^ Liu, X (2007). "Jinmu zhengce yingxiang xia de nongcun laodongli zhuanyi jizhi fenxi – Yi Ningxia Yanchixian weili [An analysis of the transfer of rural labor under the influence of the Grazing Ban: A case of Yanchi county, Ningxia]". Ziyuan Kexue. 29 (7): 40–45.