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This anti-desertification technology, known as the "straw checkerboard sand barrier," originated in China and has since spread throughout the world. In 2023, I met Tang Xining, a 57-year-old scientist who has been fighting desertification in Ningxia for more than 30 years. He is the third-generation Chinese scientist to employ...

459,375 görüntüleme • 7 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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This is again a project of an unfathomable scale that's just been completed in China and barely anyone has heard of it in the rest of the world China has just finished constructing a continuous 3,046-kilometer (1,892-mile) green barrier - made of plants and trees - completely encircling the Taklamakan Desert, the world's second-largest shifting sand desert which is about the size of Germany (!). To put this in perspective, this is like building a living wall from Paris to Istanbul, or from Los Angeles to Chicago – except they built it in one of the world's most inhospitable environments. They spent about 40 years building this "green wall". The final 285 kilometers was completed in 2024 on November 28. They built the "wall" with desert-hardy plants like Populus euphratica (desert poplar), Haloxylon (saxaul), and Tamarix (salt cedar), along with innovative sand-control engineering and solar panel installations. The objective of the project is to contain the desert's expansion and to protect surrounding agricultural areas and cities from sandstorms. Before this project, many towns in the region had to be relocated multiple times due to encroaching sand. For instance, the town of Qira in Xinjiang had to move three times in its history, with sand dunes once approaching as close as 1.5 kilometers from the town center. This is easily one of human history's most ambitious and grandest ecological engineering projects. It's insane when you think about it: completely containing a desert the size of Germany! And it's also insane how little attention this has received globally: sadly we've apparently lost the capacity to be impressed by such a project, let alone have the boldness of vision to conceive of one ourselves. All resulting in the fact that whilst China is out there completing 40-year missions to tame entire deserts, we can barely fix potholes in our roads.

Arnaud Bertrand

610,221 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

More people became stuck in the dangerous “quick sand” at the closed Three Shells Lagoon in Southend, despite fencing and warning signs already being in place. The latest incident happened on Friday, raising fresh safety concerns. According to witnesses, a family were climbing on the rocks when a child slipped off and into the wet sand. While they managed to get free, two women who tried to help quickly became trapped themselves. Barry French, who witnessed what happened, said: “One kid fell off the rocks and into the wet sand. They were okay, but both the women then got stuck and their kids were screaming hysterically. “Access to the rocks or the whole area needs to be blocked off.” The area on the beach had already been fenced off, with warnings in place about the danger of the ‘wet sand’. Southend City Council previously confirmed that the lagoon had effectively been closed, due to previous incidents of people becoming trapped in the quick sand. The £1.9 million lagoon, which first opened in 2016, will not reopen until safety improvements are made. A council spokesperson said: “In the meantime, our engineers are looking at a range of options for the lagoon. “Any options are likely to require planning applications and coastal licensing approvals.” Despite this, Friday’s incident shows people are still getting into the restricted area, with growing calls from locals for stronger measures to prevent access altogether.

Your Southend

10,456 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce