Mount Qilian National Park to be set up in 2020
CGTN
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Mount Qilian National Park, one of China's first pilot national parks, is set to be established in 2020, according to a draft plan released by the Forestry and Grassland Administration.
According to the draft, which seeks public opinion from February 15 to 28, the park is located at the border of northwestern Gansu and Qinghai provinces, covering an area of 50,200 square kilometers. Gansu is home to 68.5 percent of the park's area with the rest in Qinghai.
The national park is divided into core protected areas and general control areas. The core protected areas, which account for 55 percent of the total, include the main headwaters and catchment area in the Qilian Mountains, forests, wetlands and grasslands, and habitats of snow leopards and other endangered species.
A view of Mount Qilian in northwest China's Qinghai Province. /VCG Photo

A view of Mount Qilian in northwest China's Qinghai Province. /VCG Photo

The park extends to northern Gansu and includes the nature reserve of Mount Qilian, in addition to a series of other nearby national parks and wetlands.
Besides, areas where the ecosystem is fragile or damaged, and areas left behind by industrial and mining enterprises need to be protected and repaired.
The mountains are known for their natural resources, hence the abundance of mines. Mining is often seen as a fast way to make money. Since the 1970s, the number of mines has mushroomed across the mountain ranges, particularly in the reserve.
An ecological restoration campaign was launched in October 2015 across the reserve, which covers close to two million hectares, with construction projects under close scrutiny and mines being decommissioned.
Horses graze at the foot of Mount Qilian, northwest China's Qinghai Province. /VCG Photo

Horses graze at the foot of Mount Qilian, northwest China's Qinghai Province. /VCG Photo

The Qilian Mountains are known as the "Mother Mountains" by Gansu locals. The snow and glaciers on the mountains provide precious water to more than five million people living in the Hexi Corridor area.
Under a plan released in 2017, China aims to set up a batch of national parks and form a unified management system by 2020.
Looking forward, there will be 60 to 200 national parks built in the country, covering six to nine percent of the country's territory, said the Forestry and Grassland Administration last year.
Source(s): China Daily