China unveils plan to plant more trees and expand national parks
- Country aims to increase forest coverage rate over the next four years to 24.1 per cent in bid to improve health of ecosystem
- Senior forestry official also says national parks should cover 18 per cent of land area by 2025, with a nature reserve system in place a decade later

China aims to increase its forest coverage rate to 24.1 per cent by 2025, up from 23 per cent last year, in an effort to improve ecosystem health, a senior forestry official said on Friday.
In 2019, Chinese officials said that some 2,750 natural protection zones had been established, covering 15 per cent of the country’s land area. They claimed that the ratio would reach 18 per cent if other such areas with a lower protection status were included.
Officials have emphasised that 18 per cent milestone because it means that China will have achieved the Aichi biodiversity target, which was set in 2010 and called for 17 per cent of Earth’s land to be protected by 2020, Cui Shuhong, an official with the environment ministry, told reporters in July.

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As China continues planting trees, 23% of the country is now covered in forest
A new framework will be decided upon at the UN Biodiversity Conference to be held in the Chinese city of Kunming in October, when countries are expected to agree to protect 30 per cent of the world’s oceans and land by 2030.