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Economy of Tibet |
Economy
Tibet is rich in mineral resources, but still its
economy has remained underdeveloped. Surveys of the
Kailas and Ma-fa-mu-ts'o districts in western Tibet
conducted in the 1930s and '40s discovered extensive
goldfields and large deposits of borax, as well as
reserves of radium, iron, titanium, lead, and arsenic.
Subsequent investigative teams dispatched in the 1950s
by the Academia Sinica (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
reported the existence of a huge variety of minerals and
ores. The most significant of these include a belt of
iron-ore deposits located on the western bank of the
Mekong River stretching for almost 25 miles south of
Ch'ang-tu; graphite obtained from Ning-chin and coal
reported to be plentiful around Ch'ang-tu; deposits of
iron ore in concentrated seams of high quality and
extractable depth found in the T'ang-ku-la Mountains on
the Tibet-Tsinghai border; and oil-bearing formations, a
reserve of oil shales, and lead, zinc, and manganese.
The most valuable woodland is the Khams district, though
extensive forest-clad mountains are also found in the
Sutlej Valley in the southwest and in the Ch'u-mu-pi
Valley in the far south. In the late 1950s some 30 kinds
of trees, including those of economic value such as
varnish trees, spruce, and fir, were discovered; and the
estimated total of forest timber resources in the Khams
area alone was placed at more than 3,510,000,000 cubic
feet (100,000,000 cubic meters).
The swift-flowing rivers and mountain streams have
enormous hydroelectric power potential, totaling about
one-third of all China's potential hydroelectric
resources. Especially promising are the Brahmaputra,
Lhasa, and Ni-yang-ch'ü rivers. The coal deposits and
forests represent possible sources of thermal power
production, and there are vast opportunities for
geothermal, solar, and Elian power production.
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Picture of Tibet |
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Tibet Information |
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