Investigative Reporter Reveals CCP’s Legacy of Environmental Destruction in China

During the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) 20th national congress, China’s ruling regime claimed that they have been more effective in managing the environment over the past decade, citing official data. However, a Chinese investigative journalist revealed that the deterioration of the environment in mainland China is shocking and may not recover for decades.Zhai Qing, vice minister for the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, said at a press conference during the party congress that in the past ten years, under the guidance of “Xi Jinping and the thought of ecological civilization,” the party has made overall advances in China’s ecological and environmental protection. He claimed numerous achievements, including China becoming the country with the fastest improvement in air quality in the world, the country’s improved safety rating for the drinking water of 770 million people, and the restoration and increase in population of more than 300 kinds of rare and endangered wild animals and plants. Regarding the official claims, mainland Chinese investigative reporter Zhao Lanjian told The Epoch Times on Oct. 23 that China’s air pollution, groundwater pollution, soil pollution, and so on are all still at shocking levels. People’s anti-pollution protests have been suppressed, investigative reporters have been silenced, and only CCP officials from the Ministry of Environment would brag about the state of China’s environment. “The standards for environmental protection evaluation should first come from the establishment of the evaluation system of non-governmental organizations (NGO), so that it is possible to objectively evaluate the environmental protection results that are related to people’s lives,” Zhao said. “He [Zhai] is bragging about how well the CCP manages the environment. All the questions at the press conference are prepared in advance, and its data cannot be trusted.” Predatory Development Destroys Natural Reserves Zhao pointed out that the CCP’s environmental protection policies and its economic development model are contradictory. “Some protected natural resource landscapes have been developed for quick commercial success in a predatory model, such as Zhangjiajie or Changbai Mountain.” Tourists are seen on sightseeing cruises at the Baofeng Lake on Sept. 1, 2013 in Zhangjiajie, China. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images) “I have visited Changbai Mountain four times; the earliest visit was in 1994 and again in 2015, and I found out that the natural reserve has been plundered and artificially developed, and all the scenic spots in China are facing the same problem,” Zhao said. He compared the situation with other countries. “I have visited ecological parks in many countries, such as the United States and Chile, where people are not allowed to build roads nor to develop commercial tourism. However, China puts the tourist economic model in first place; puts tourism revenue from selling tickets in first place.” Zhao said that he has spent 10 years investigating the ecological status of places along China’s Yangtze River, Yellow River, in Qinghai, as well as Tibet and Inner Mongolia, and has witnessed the devastation of the same predatory development model on the natural environment. Desertification Affecting Water Supply, Fisheries In 2018, Zhao went to various areas of Sanjiangyuan, on the Tibetan plateau in the south of Qinghai province, to do field studies, and saw the extent of many new deserts. Compared with the maps in the past, “I found out that this desert was formed in the last 30 years. Thirty years ago, it was graveyards and swamps,” he said. “The existence of this desert proves that at least the ecological environment of the Sanjiangyuan area has undergone shocking changes compared with 30 years ago. I interviewed some experts, and they also believed that the desertification of the upper reaches of the Sanjiangyuan has actually caused the water shortage in Shanghai and the entire Yangtze River system,” Zhao said. Sanjiangyuan, which literally means “The Source of the Three Rivers,” is the birthplace of the Yangtze River, the Yellow River, and the Lancang River. It is known as the “Chinese Water Tower” and plays an important role in China’s ecological status and national economic development. An aerial view shows the Yangtze river that is approaching record-low water levels during a regional drought in Chongqing, China, on Aug. 20, 2022. (Thomas Peter/Reuters) “Everyone can see the deterioration of China’s ecological environment now, such as the cut-off of the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers and many water systems,” Zhao said. “The cutoff of such water systems will also affect the development of agriculture, animal husbandry, and fisheries along the rivers. Therefore, no matter how good the government’s slogan is about these environmental issues, the reality is visible to everyone.” CCP leader Xi Jinping emphasized two points about the environment in his speech at the party’s 20th National

Investigative Reporter Reveals CCP’s Legacy of Environmental Destruction in China

During the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) 20th national congress, China’s ruling regime claimed that they have been more effective in managing the environment over the past decade, citing official data. However, a Chinese investigative journalist revealed that the deterioration of the environment in mainland China is shocking and may not recover for decades.

Zhai Qing, vice minister for the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, said at a press conference during the party congress that in the past ten years, under the guidance of “Xi Jinping and the thought of ecological civilization,” the party has made overall advances in China’s ecological and environmental protection. He claimed numerous achievements, including China becoming the country with the fastest improvement in air quality in the world, the country’s improved safety rating for the drinking water of 770 million people, and the restoration and increase in population of more than 300 kinds of rare and endangered wild animals and plants.

Regarding the official claims, mainland Chinese investigative reporter Zhao Lanjian told The Epoch Times on Oct. 23 that China’s air pollution, groundwater pollution, soil pollution, and so on are all still at shocking levels. People’s anti-pollution protests have been suppressed, investigative reporters have been silenced, and only CCP officials from the Ministry of Environment would brag about the state of China’s environment.

“The standards for environmental protection evaluation should first come from the establishment of the evaluation system of non-governmental organizations (NGO), so that it is possible to objectively evaluate the environmental protection results that are related to people’s lives,” Zhao said. “He [Zhai] is bragging about how well the CCP manages the environment. All the questions at the press conference are prepared in advance, and its data cannot be trusted.”

Predatory Development Destroys Natural Reserves

Zhao pointed out that the CCP’s environmental protection policies and its economic development model are contradictory.

“Some protected natural resource landscapes have been developed for quick commercial success in a predatory model, such as Zhangjiajie or Changbai Mountain.”

Epoch Times Photo
Tourists are seen on sightseeing cruises at the Baofeng Lake on Sept. 1, 2013 in Zhangjiajie, China. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)

“I have visited Changbai Mountain four times; the earliest visit was in 1994 and again in 2015, and I found out that the natural reserve has been plundered and artificially developed, and all the scenic spots in China are facing the same problem,” Zhao said.

He compared the situation with other countries. “I have visited ecological parks in many countries, such as the United States and Chile, where people are not allowed to build roads nor to develop commercial tourism. However, China puts the tourist economic model in first place; puts tourism revenue from selling tickets in first place.”

Zhao said that he has spent 10 years investigating the ecological status of places along China’s Yangtze River, Yellow River, in Qinghai, as well as Tibet and Inner Mongolia, and has witnessed the devastation of the same predatory development model on the natural environment.

Desertification Affecting Water Supply, Fisheries

In 2018, Zhao went to various areas of Sanjiangyuan, on the Tibetan plateau in the south of Qinghai province, to do field studies, and saw the extent of many new deserts. Compared with the maps in the past, “I found out that this desert was formed in the last 30 years. Thirty years ago, it was graveyards and swamps,” he said.

“The existence of this desert proves that at least the ecological environment of the Sanjiangyuan area has undergone shocking changes compared with 30 years ago. I interviewed some experts, and they also believed that the desertification of the upper reaches of the Sanjiangyuan has actually caused the water shortage in Shanghai and the entire Yangtze River system,” Zhao said.

Sanjiangyuan, which literally means “The Source of the Three Rivers,” is the birthplace of the Yangtze River, the Yellow River, and the Lancang River. It is known as the “Chinese Water Tower” and plays an important role in China’s ecological status and national economic development.

Epoch Times Photo
An aerial view shows the Yangtze river that is approaching record-low water levels during a regional drought in Chongqing, China, on Aug. 20, 2022. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

“Everyone can see the deterioration of China’s ecological environment now, such as the cut-off of the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers and many water systems,” Zhao said. “The cutoff of such water systems will also affect the development of agriculture, animal husbandry, and fisheries along the rivers. Therefore, no matter how good the government’s slogan is about these environmental issues, the reality is visible to everyone.”

CCP leader Xi Jinping emphasized two points about the environment in his speech at the party’s 20th National Congress: that the party will be “deeply promoting the prevention and control of environmental pollution, and further promoting the ecological protection and management of important rivers, lakes, and reservoirs.”

In response, Zhao said of Xi’s comments, “The issues of environmental protection and ecology are imminent and he had to mention it. When we noticed that the environment has changed, the environment has actually already been deteriorating to a certain extent. The development model of the entire society is on the verge of crisis.”

Epoch Times Photo
Pollution in a river in the Tengger Desert in northwest China’s Zhongwei, Ningxia Hui autonomous region, after releases of chemical wastewater by a paper company. After the wastewater dried up, a large number of chemical crystals appeared on the shore. (Provided by Zhao Lanjian)

Zhao Lanjian’s 2014 report revealed shocking pollution in the Tengger Desert. Local herdsmen pointed out that sewage ponds had appeared in the desert hinterland, with local enterprises discharging untreated wastewater into the sewage ponds. His articles and photos have since been deleted from the internet by the regime.

Censoring Journalists, Protests

Zhao said, “China has tightened control of the media since 2014, and investigative reporters have been severely suppressed. At the same time, large-scale anti-pollution demonstrations by tens of thousands of people have emerged one after another across China, all of which have been brutally suppressed by the CCP’s military and police.

The groundwater in 90 percent of China’s cities is polluted due to the deep underground discharge of sewage by enterprises. A public welfare activist has made a “Map of Cancer Villages in China.” Due to pollution, there are thousands of cancer villages across the country, Zhao said.

A vast expanse of toxic waste fills the tailings dam on April 21, 2011, frequently whipped up by strong winds dumping millions of tons of radioactive materials toward surounding villages where farmers blame producers of rare earths and major iron ore mine and steel producers for poisoning their fields and ruining their livelihoods near Baotou City in Inner Mongolia, northwest China. Farmers living near the tailings dam, a 10-square-kilometer expanse of toxic waste, say they have lost teeth and their hair has turned white while tests show the soil and water contain high levels of cancer-causing radioactive materials. China produces more than 95% of the world's rare earths—17 elements used to make things like iPods, flat-screen televisions and electric cars, two-thirds of which are processed in mineral-rich Baotou on the edge of the Gobi desert. Environmental groups have long criticised rare earths mining for spewing toxic chemicals and radioactive thorium and uranium into the air, water and soil, which can cause cancer and birth defects among residents and animals. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images)
An expanse of about 4-square-miles of radioactive waste outside Baotou City in northern China on April 21, 2011. Strong winds whip up the cancer-causing materials dumped by producers of rare-earth minerals, iron ore, and steel, poisoning surrounding villages and farms. China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection admitted that there are at least 450 pollution-related “cancer villages” in the country. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images)

“How is China’s current environment?” Zhao asked. “The final evaluation system is in the hands of the government.”

He pointed out: “After Xi Jinping advocated green mountains and rivers, the local governments have not been able to restore green mountains. As a result, plastic green plants were spread from the top of the mountain layer by layer, and the bare mountain became an artificial green mountain, and there were many places where ‘green’ mountains were sprayed with green ink and paint.”

He said, “The destruction of the entire natural environment in China, the destruction of tourism resources, and the destruction of ecological resources may not be recovered in the next few decades or even hundreds of years.”

Li Yun and Luo Ya contributed to this report.

Alex Wu

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Alex Wu is a U.S.-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on Chinese society, Chinese culture, human rights, and international relations.