To achieve the goal of developing ginseng cultivation under the forest canopy of Lai Chau from now until 2030, Mr. Ngo Xuan Hung, Deputy Director of the Department of Natural Resources and Environment, Lai Chau province, said: Currently, districts and cities are adjusting land use planning for the period 2021 - 2030 at the district level. At the same time, speed up the progress of adjusting planning, annual land use plans and land allocation records, granting land use right certificates (LURs) and synthesizing the list of projects and works that must recover land and change land use purposes in 2024, including planning areas to implement ginseng cultivation projects.
At the same time, the Department of Natural Resources and Environment has urged the People's Committees of districts to develop land use plans for the protection forest management boards, review the current status of forested land areas, adjust the land and forest allocation areas for protection forest management boards to have a basis for leasing forest environmental services combined with planting medicinal plants under the forest canopy (especially Lai Chau ginseng).
For areas that have been granted Land Use Rights Certificates to households and individuals, investors who need to lease land to develop ginseng cultivation in Lai Chau can lease land in the form of purchasing assets attached to the land, receiving transfers, leasing land use rights, or receiving capital contributions in the form of land use rights. For investment units that have been granted investment policies according to the provisions of Article 73 of the 2013 Land Law and Article 16 of Decree No. 43/2014/ND-CP, dated May 15, 2014, amended and supplemented in Clause 13, Article 1 of Decree No. 148/2020/ND-CP, dated December 18, 2020 of the Government, or cooperate with households that have land to grow ginseng.
For areas that have been allocated land to the Protection Forest Management Board, investors will hire forest environmental services to plant and develop ginseng planting projects under the forest canopy in accordance with the provisions of the 2017 Forestry Law and Decree No. 156/2018/ND-CP, dated November 16, 2018 of the Government.
As for auxiliary works (headquarters, production roads, processing facilities, etc.), we have coordinated with relevant agencies and units to advise the Provincial People's Committee to allow the change of land use purpose, land lease and issuance of Land Use Rights Certificates according to the approved investment project. - Mr. Hung said.
Previously, Lai Chau Provincial People's Committee issued Plan No. 1452/KH-UBND, dated November 9, 2022 on developing Lai Chau ginseng, period 2022 - 2030 and orientation to 2045. With the goal, the scale of raw material area for developing safe ginseng growing area by 2030, about 3,000 hectares, by 2045 about 10,000 hectares and has been approved by the Prime Minister in Decision No. 611/QD-TTg, dated June 1, 2023, approving the program for developing Vietnamese ginseng by 2030, orientation to 2045, with orientation for Lai Chau ginseng development area.
Accordingly, Lai Chau determined that in the first phase from now until 2030, the ginseng growing area under the protective forest canopy will be 2,700 hectares, under the production forest canopy will be 287 hectares, and on 13 hectares of agricultural land.
Up to now, Lai Chau has included in the planning and land use plan about 103 hectares of land for growing ginseng and other medicinal plants in the districts of Muong Te, Sin Ho and Tam Duong. Along with that, the Provincial People's Committee has approved the adjustment of the land use planning for the period 2021 - 2030 of Than Uyen district and 2 land use plans of the Protective Forest Management Board of Tan Uyen district and Muong Te district. The procedures for preparing land funds for developing Lai Chau ginseng under the forest canopy have been thoroughly implemented by specialized agencies and the People's Committees of districts and cities to achieve the target of about 3,000 hectares by 2030 and 10,000 hectares by 2045.
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