China To Facilitate Ice-And-Snow Tourism In Northeastern Region
Xinhua/APP
Beijing: China’s top economic planner on Thursday announced plans to further advance the high-quality development of ice-and-snow tourism in the country’s northeastern region.
To attract foreign tourists, Harbin, capital city of northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, will extend its visa-free period for foreigners transiting through the city from 72 hours to 144 hours, according to an action plan released by the National Development and Reform Commission.
This action plan states that China will work to coordinate the visa-exempt transit policies of other areas in the northeastern region with that of Harbin.
The plan is also to actively attract tourists from the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the Yangtze River Delta, the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and other places in China to enjoy winter in the northeast.
The plan notes that localities will be supported in rolling out measures to promote ice-and-snow tourism including setting up special local holidays.
The plan further stipulates that cooperation with travel platforms will be strengthened.
Read More: https://thepenpk.com/scientists-probe-tajik-glacier-for-clues-to-climate-resistance/
Meanwhile, Kon Chukurbashi: Greenland is melting, the Alps are melting, and the Himalayas are melting — yet in one vast mountain region, huge glaciers have remained stable, or even gained mass, in recent decades.
The key question now is: can it last?
To find out, a team of a dozen scientists — accompanied exclusively by an AFP photographer — trekked high into the eastern mountains of Tajikistan to drill for ancient ice cores that could hold vital clues about climate change.
In September and October, the researchers spent four days crossing the country from west to east in four-wheel drives, before climbing on foot to over 5,800 metres on the Kon-Chukurbashi ice cap near the Chinese border.
Camping for a week at the summit in freezing temperatures and enduring a day-long blizzard, the scientists from Switzerland, Japan, the United States, and Tajikistan drilled two 105-metre-long ice cores in sections.
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