China committing Genocide against the desert.
Source: World Desert Congress (Radio Free Sand)
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China committing Genocide against the desert.
Source: World Desert Congress (Radio Free Sand)
Wont anyone think of the billions of grains of sand China is eradicating?
10 gorillion sand according to the Black Beach of Communism
I have seen the not-desert. it was awful and gave me PTSD
Xi is the new Stalin turning the land green
Jokes aside, i am fascinated with this region and with what China has been accomplishing there. Just the fact that they managed to build whole highways through an enormous shifting sand desert that is basically the size of Germany is a feat in and of itself. The most recent one actually finished just over a year ago:
http://english.ts.cn/system/2024/11/20/036937530.shtml
And on top of that they've also built what they call their "first zero-carbon desert highway":
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202406/1313925.shtml
As your post hints at, all around the desert they've now built a "green wall":
https://www.charmission.cn/explorechina/201.html
And since i love maps, here are a couple showing the quite extensive desert highway network:
In fact by now there is actually a fourth north-south connection:
All of these cut travel times by a lot since now you no longer have to drive around the entire desert. The way they build these is also super fascinating because they obviously have to stop the sand from engulfing the road, so they make these huge grass grids to keep the sand back.
And right at the crossroads of two of those highways, in the middle of the desert more than a hundred kilometers from any other major settlement, is a town called Tazhong. This Chinese travel vlogger went there and it's fascinating to see how people live in such a remote location.
Here's some more cool maps:
The old silk road:
Tarim river tributary system (some of these rivers only flow seasonally, if at all... it's a very dry place):
Vegetation & altitude map:
Much of that green didn't use to be there, a lot of these oases have been purposely expanded by China to create more vegetation and area for cultivation. Though climate change is also a factor as it accelerates melting of snow and ice in the surrounding mountains, increasing runoff water.
Nice info-drop, cfgaussian
Thanks! I know it was probably not super relevant to your post but i'm just a big nerd for geography and i love sharing cool stuff about lesser known parts of the world.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
Are there actually people out there who think this is a bad thing?
This is a shitpost from the other lemmy instance. So, no, the OPs are just joking about it, comparing it to a military campaign.
No. Which is why they'll go for "but at what cost??" in this case
Can't have China having a environmentally sustainable trade routes with central Asia. Just image they build high speed train network there the horror
That documentary was absolutely fascinating, thank you for posting.
I was particularly interested in the plants second half with the usage of cyanobacteria to create lycan & stabilize the soil, & also with the plant they planted in the salt lakes. That feels like knowledge that could be used elsewhere in the face of desertification.
But at what cost?!
Many km² of precious wasteland. Those commies don't hold anything dear.