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UPDATED: January 10, 2007 NO.3 JAN.18, 2007
Green Heroes
Civil-society environmental groups are pushing China toward a greener future
By LI LI
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These lessons have been learned through hard experience. The fiercest battle between China's environmental NGOs and economic interests in recent years has taken place over the construction of a dam on the Nujiang River, one of the few rivers with a relatively intact ecological environment in the wake of the fervor over building hydroelectric plants on China's major rivers.

In August 2003, a blueprint for constructing 13 dams along the middle and lower reaches of the Nujiang River was revealed at a regular meeting of the National Development and Reform Commission, but was vetoed by the representative from SEPA in the absence of a persuasive environmental appraisal report. China's Environmental Impact Assessment Law, which went into effect in September 2003, requires environmental impact studies by construction companies for all construction projects.

One week later, Wang from Green Earth Volunteers, who is also a journalist for China National Radio, voiced her opposition to the dam at a SEPA hearing and persuaded other journalists at that hearing to report on the hearing and environmental experts' concerns. This marked the official beginning of an anti-dam campaign joined by a handful of NGOs, including Green Earth Volunteers, Friends of Nature and Yunnan-based Green Watershed.

Confronting the pro-dam contingent of local governments at prospective dam sites and big hydropower companies, NGOs conducted field surveys of the area, published articles, organized seminars, delivered public speeches, handed over reports to the government and gathered support from their foreign counterparts at international conferences. They even had face-to-face debates with hydropower experts who support dam construction. Their efforts scored a victory in February 2004 when Premier Wen Jiabao wrote, "Colossal hydropower projects like this that attract wide public attention and arouse strong environmental concerns require careful research and scientific decision-making."

Despite the suspension of the project, the battle between the pro-dam and anti-dam camp is still going on as the Central Government has yet to make a final decision. Wang, 53, said her organization has been keeping up with the latest developments at the grassroots level on a daily basis.

She said this would not be the first time environmental NGOs influenced a major government decision if they succeed in protecting the Nujiang from dam construction. The anti-dam campaign, with NGOs as pillars, has already prevented two dam projects in southwestern Sichuan Province since 2003.

Another victory is the "26-degree campaign" initiated by six NGOs in 2004 to alleviate the country's chronic seasonal power shortage. The initiative of setting air conditioners above 26 degrees centigrade in the summer became a government regulation released by the State Council in August 2006, stipulating that all public venues, except those with special temperature requirements, have to set air conditioners above 26 degrees in summer and below 20 degrees in winter.

Wang has been nominated for the "Green Chinese of the Year" prize twice, but missed it both times. She said she does not care about any prize and will continue her efforts out of a pure love of nature. "I started to get close to nature as a journalist concerned about environmental problems, but as I get closer to nature I have developed deep emotions with her as a 'friend,'" Wang added with a grin.

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