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Fighting for life: China’s eco gains in focus in countdown to COP15
- Kunming used to be home to one of the country’s most polluted lakes
- Much has changed in recent decades as people have sought a better balance between the economy and the environment
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Lin Shiyong has seen the changes for himself.
As the 51-year-old fishes from a river near the southwestern Chinese city of Kunming, several egrets wade in the shallows searching for fish.
Nearby, uniformed workers row boats out to scoop up floating rubbish decaying weeds from the waterway that flows into Dian Lake, the biggest freshwater body in southwestern China.
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The birdlife and the environmental efforts are a sharp contrast to just a decade ago when the lake was one of the most polluted in the country.
“The water in Dianchi was green and it was stinking 10 years ago, but now it’s much better,” Lin said. “There are different kinds of birds on the trees in the morning. The population of aquatic animals in the river has also increased.”
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