China has created a 3,000-kilometer-long green belt of trees
This is the story of China's great green wall—a belt of green, defiant trees encircling the Taklamakan Desert in China, and the incredible 46-year effort to achieve this feat.Located in the northwestern region of Xinjiang, the Taklamakan Desert, also known as the Sea of Death, is one of the world’s largest and harshest deserts. For decades, its sands were a constant menace, fueling devastating sandstorms that swept across China every spring, even reaching Beijing. As per the latest reports, China has completed the 3,000-kilometer-long “green belt” of trees around the desert.
The initiative is a part of China’s ambitious "Three-North Shelterbelt" project launched in 1978, was nothing short of monumental. The initiative was dubbed “Great Green Wall.” This campaign aimed to combat desertification by planting trees on an unprecedented scale. Over the years, more than 30 million hectares of trees have been planted under the program. For a country once struggling with just 10% forest coverage in 1949, this project has been transformative, pushing that figure to over 25% by the end of last year.
This achievement, however, isn’t without its challenges. Critics argue that tree survival rates have often been low and that the problem of sandstorms aren't actually over yet. These storms continue to plague the region. If reports are to go by, sandstorms, fierce and unyielding, continue to batter cities like Beijing, raising questions about the true effectiveness of the green belt.





