Nestled in the southeastern corner of Heilongjiang Province, the city of Jixi (鸡西) remains one of China’s most overlooked historical gems. Once a powerhouse of coal production, its story mirrors the global tension between industrial progress and environmental reckoning—a tension now magnified by climate change debates.
Jixi’s modern history began in the late 19th century, when the Qing Dynasty encouraged Han migration to the region to counter Russian expansion. The area’s dense forests and untapped mineral wealth attracted settlers, but it was the discovery of coal in 1914 that reshaped its destiny.
By the 1930s, Japanese occupiers industrialized Jixi’s mines, using forced labor to fuel their war machine. This dark chapter left deep scars—collapsed tunnels, unmarked graves, and a lingering distrust of external powers. Post-1949, Jixi became a symbol of Mao-era self-reliance, with its mines powering Northeast China’s heavy industries.
At its peak in the 1980s, Jixi produced over 10 million tons of coal annually. The city thrived: Soviet-style apartment blocks housed miners’ families, state-owned theaters screened propaganda films, and the scent of roasted Jixi Lengmian (cold noodles) filled bustling night markets. Coal wasn’t just an industry—it was identity.
Long before COP26 made headlines, Jixi faced ecological collapse. Acid rain from unchecked sulfur emissions poisoned the Muling River. Subsidence from underground mines swallowed entire neighborhoods—a local joke claimed you could "dig for coal in your basement." By 2005, 23% of the city’s land was classified as "geologically hazardous."
When China’s state-owned enterprises restructured in the 1990s, Jixi’s mines shed jobs overnight. Younger generations fled to Shenzhen or Beijing, leaving behind aging parents and "ghost shifts" (abandoned mining equipment now overgrown with birch trees). The population plummeted from 1.9 million in 1990 to 1.5 million today—a microcosm of Northeast China’s decline.
Facing existential threats, Jixi is testing unlikely survival strategies:
Jixi’s struggles resonate globally:
On winter mornings, elderly miners still gather in Jixi’s parks, their lungs scarred by decades of coal dust. They reminisce about the "black gold" days, even as their grandchildren protest for greener futures. The city’s contradictions—pride in its past, fear for its future—mirror humanity’s own fractured relationship with progress.
Perhaps Jixi’s greatest lesson is this: transitions aren’t about technology alone, but about whose stories get remembered—and whose get buried.