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Top Story Home> Top Story
UPDATED: January-10-2007 NO.51 DEC.21, 2006
Action Plan
China translates its awareness of environmental protection into workable laws
By TANG YUANKAI

In a three-month-long campaign, NPC Standing Committee sent out five law-enforcement teams nationwide to investigate garbage pollution, water pollution and atmospheric pollution. Sheng Huaren's conclusion is based on the shocking findings of pollution in China's mother river, the Yellow River, and its four tributaries.

Other worrisome findings from the inspections were that China's industrial garbage had gone up to nearly 8 billion tons, occupying a land area of more than 130,000 hectares; nearly half of China's urban garbage is piled up without recycling, and this has led to severe pollution of underground and surface water.

Policy shift

When China's Sixth National Environmental Protection Conference opened on April 17 in Beijing, the city was hit by a huge sand storm and was shrouded in dust estimated at 300,000 tons.

"We should have an open-door meeting. We all know that the dusty weather has lasted for more than ten days in Beijing. Besides the climate factors, we should see the urgency of environmental problems from it," said Premier Wen Jiabao at the conference, where he put forward "three shifts of policies."

The "three shifts of policies" refer to the shift from giving more weight to economic growth over environmental protection to paying equal attention to both goals; abandoning the development model of "polluting first and then redressing problems later;" and the shift from total reliance on administrative measures to a mix of legal, economic, technological and administrative measures.

Minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) Zhou Shengxian said, "The 'three shifts' are very significant." He said that the new importance to environmental protection can be seen from the fact that environmental considerations are now being reckoned in regional development, environmental management has become important aspect of industrial restructuring, environmental standards have become important conditions for market entry and environmental costs have become part of the pricing mechanism.

The 'New Deal'

"The implementation of environmental policies will be as forceful as steel, not as weak as tofu," said Zhou Shengxian, after surveying environmental protection practices in 31 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities this year. In the "New Deal" led by Zhou, the most significant step is the inclusion of environmental work in officials' evaluation and responsibility system.

Without such a system, local government officials would usually support environmental protection work in words, but not in action. In the past, the weak implementation of the policies of local governments was the biggest loophole. Now, pollution reduction has been made a concrete task for governors and mayors.

Another breakthrough is the launch of the Southwest Environmental Protection Supervision Center of SEPA on December 5. The Chinese Government announced the plan to set up five regional environmental protection supervision centers in July. "The five centers will come under the direct leadership of SEPA and will be independent of local governments," said an official from SEPA, involved in the setting up of the centers. But, he also said the five centers would cooperate with the environmental protection agencies of local governments in implementing relevant laws and regulations.

According to SEPA's plans, the five centers will help officials solve environmental problems that extend beyond one drainage area or one administrative region. The goal is to set up a network of competent environmental supervision centers covering every province, autonomous region and municipality by 2010, which will conduct real-time supervision of 65 percent of the biggest polluters in China.

Zhou Shengxian pointed out another breakthrough is a separate account for environmental protection in the government budget. In the past, expenses on environmental protection were listed under other entries in the budget. SEPA experts have said that China needs to spend 1.5 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) on environmental protection but until 1999 the figure stood at barely 1 percent of GDP.

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