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Will the Desert Claim Minqin?

Lop Nur was once a huge lake surrounded by fertile land in the northeast of Ruoqiang County in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. It found its place in history as a communication hub of the ancient Silk Road.

 

By 1972 it was bone dry and had been swallowed up in the sea of death” of the Gobi desert. Now there are fears that the tragedy of Lop Nor might be happening all over again in northwest China. This time, it is Minqin County that is at risk.

 

Minqin County is located in the northeast of the Hexi Corridor on the lower reaches of the Shiyang River. It falls under the jurisdiction of Wuwei City, Gansu Province. The county is bounded by the Tengger and Badain Jaran deserts in the east, west and north. The oasis in Minqin was once a natural barrier in the path of the encroaching sand. The past two decades have seen it change into one of the four major sources of sandstorms in north China. Two factors were involved. There was land reclamation along the Shiyang River, up-steam from Minqin County and its waters were diverted for irrigation purposes. Then came years of unprecedented dry weather. Today the county is one of the driest places nationwide and it is also one of the most seriously affected by desertification.

 

Large-scale exploitation of the groundwater has been lowering groundwater levels by as much as 0.5-1.0 meters a year in Minqin County.

 
As the county has no significant surface water of its own, the only access to surface water runoff comes by way of the Shiyang River in the south. With reservoir construction on the upper reaches of this river now nearly completed, the water reaching Minqin has been seriously restricted. What was once 30 percent of the life-giving flow of the river has now dwindled to a trickle of less than 3 percent. This came against a background of many years of shrinking surface water resources. The people of Minqin County first turned to the exploitation of underground water back in the 1960s. Over the years, the main source of water for irrigation in the county changed from surface runoff to well water, supplemented by river water.

 

Today in Zhongqu Village of Minqin County, some 400 villagers live a life of hardship in the midst of the relentless desert. Village leader, Ma Zhongxing remembers the days of his childhood when the village was a place of wetlands and reeds. However, serious drought started to affect the village in 1997. Of the village’s 15,000 mu (about 1,000 hectares) of land, only 800 mu (53 hectares) are now cultivated. The rest have been abandoned or claimed by the desert.

 

"As the water from Shiyang River decreased, we had to dig deep wells for irrigation. There are five wells in the village going down 300 meters," said Ma Zhongxing.

 

According to Chen Dexing, head of Minqin County, over-exploitation of groundwater in the face of the county’s water shortage is running at some 428 million cubic meters a year. He said, "Groundwater consumption is increasing dramatically. Underground water levels are dropping by some 0.5-1.0 meters per year. If depletion continues at this rate, the groundwater will run completely dry in 17 years."

 

"We have no choice but to draw water from the wells because there is no water in the river. But using the groundwater has been turning the soil saline-alkaline," said Shen Jiaodao, a farmer of Xiarun Village, Donghu Town.

 

Over-exploitation of groundwater coupled with inadequate re-supply from surface water, has seen the quality of the underground water in Minqin deteriorate dramatically. Mineral content now averages 6g/L and mineralization of 16g/L has been recorded. This far exceeds the national standard of 1g/L for drinking water. "Domestic animals can't drink the water, let alone human beings," said Shen.

 

About 1.48 million farmers and 180,000 heads of livestock in the county are facing a drinking water crisis. In some places, villagers have to fetch water from 10 kilometers away.

 

Long-term exposure to drinking water with a high fluorine content has led to a high incidence of malignant tumors among the villagers with nearly 100 cases a year. In addition, there is a high death rate among the livestock.

 

Today the environment and climate make Minqin County a difficult place to live in. The experts classify the county as having a severely dry continental climate. Annual precipitation is just 110 mm but evaporation is some 24 times greater at 2,644 mm. It is commonplace to see newly planted vegetation die off in the grip of the worsening drought.

 

The “l(fā)ake district” of Minqin, comprises five village and towns: Xiqu, Zhongyu, Donghu, Shoucheng, and Hongshaliang. They are right in the frontline, facing the advance of the Tengger and Badain Jaran deserts. In Zhongqu village where Qingtu Lake could once be found, there are huge clouds of dust in place of an abundance of water and lush pasture.

 

All around, the relentless wind is pushing the seemingly endless deserts onwards towards the oasis threatening to engulf it.

 

The “l(fā)ake district” averages an annual 139 days of wind and dust. Twenty-nine of those days will see the wind pass the force eight mark, and 37 days will bring sandstorms with winds up to force eleven. Local farmers often get up in the morning to see sheep on the roofs of the houses and the courtyard walls disappeared, buried below the drifting sands. Seventy percent of the land of the five villages and towns is now lost to the desert or blighted by saline-alkaline soil. Of the area’s 1.43 million mu (about 95,300 hectares) only 190,000 mu (12,700 hectares) are still under cultivation. The severe drought has led to the desert sands encroaching from the east, west and north at an average rate of 10 meters per year. Some individual dunes are advancing by up to 20 meters a year.

 

In some places, the arid conditions have become too harsh for people to make a living. They have been left with no choice but to move out. Chen Dexing, head of Minqin County, said that in the last few years more than 30,000 farmers have left their oasis homes to resettle elsewhere, pushed out by the drifting sands and water shortages.

 

The special geographical position and natural environment of Minqin make its story a classic example of humankind’s struggle to find water and cope with the desert. With support from governments at all levels, there have been partial successes in improving the eco-environment thanks to the efforts of 300,000 local people. According to statistics from the county's forestry bureau, forestry plantations had covered 1.4 million mu (about 93,400 hectares) by the end of last year. Desert vegetation had been established in a bid to stabilize a further 730,000 mu (48,700 hectares). A 330-kilometer long protective belt of trees had been completed. This effectively controls the advance of the sand, while allowing the wind to pass through 188 wind gaps.

 

"Although some parts of the eco-environment have witnessed an improvement, the deterioration of the ecology in Minqin as a whole has not been curbed," said Chen Dexing, "94.5 percent of the area of the county has now succumbed to desertification. Much of the desert vegetation has died or withered. Drifting sands extend over 600,000 mu (about 40,000 hectares). There are currently 69 points where sand is impinging along the edge of the oasis and together with other areas of sand encroachment, these need to be dealt with urgently.

 

Minqin’s Hongyashan Reservoir ran completely dry at the end of June, sounding the alarm bells for the worsening water crisis. It is the biggest desert reservoir in Asia

 

As early as the beginning of the 1990s, the provincial government of Gansu made representations during the initial stages of planning for the Shiyang River water conservancy project. They argued that the water flowing to Minqin by way of the river must be maintained at a level sufficient to guarantee the long-term survival of the oasis. However the conflicting demands for water in the upper, middle and lower reaches of Shiyang River have not yet been satisfactorily resolved.

 

“Preventing Minqin from suffering the same fate as Lop Nor is a matter of concern which clearly extends beyond the interests of the county, city or even the province,” said Chen Dexing. “The root cause of the widespread deterioration in the local eco-environment is the widening gap between supply and demand for water. Only by tapping the waters of the Shiyang River can the oasis be saved from becoming another dead sea.”

 

“If this can be done soon it will benefit both the state and the people, and Minqin can be saved from becoming a second Lop Nur,” said Chen.

 

(China.org.cn by Zhang Tingting, September 3, 2004)

NW China: Trying to Maintain a Delicate Balance
'Sea of Death' Rich in Sylvite Resources
Scientific Research in 'Sea of Death' Starts
Experts Claim Quaternary Freshwater Lake at Lop Nor
Reforestation Halts Desert
20 Natural Lakes Dried up Each Year
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