Advertisement
Science
ChinaScience

China’s ‘green great wall’ in Inner Mongolia traps 3 more deserts

Last straw checkerboard placed at Badain Jaran Desert completes 1,856km green belt that also runs across the Tengger and Ulan Buh deserts

2-MIN READ2-MIN
25
Listen
Tourists take photos of camels in the Badain Jaran Desert in China’s Inner Mongolia autonomous region. Photo: Xinhua
Victoria Bela
China has completed a sand control belt spanning three deserts in Inner Mongolia, marking yet another milestone in the creation of a “green great wall” across the arid northern region.

The last piece of straw checkerboard, a widely used method in China to stabilise sand, was placed at the southern edge of the Badain Jaran Desert on Sunday, according to state news agency Xinhua.

The move completed a 1,856km (1,153-mile) green belt that also runs across the Tengger and Ulan Buh deserts, the agency reported on Monday.

Advertisement

The three deserts in Alxa league, the westernmost part of Inner Mongolia, cover a total area of 94,700 sq km (36,564 square miles).

Zhang Youyong, chief engineer of the Alxa right banner’s forestry, grassland and desert control bureau, told Xinhua: “We use the straw checkerboard method to first lock the shifting sand, followed by planting drought-resistant trees such as sacsaoul.

Advertisement

“This approach helps us build an effective sand prevention and control system, ultimately strengthening the ecological barrier.”

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x