BEIJING - China will rigorously enforce limits on industrial pollution as it
seeks to rein in heavy pollution and tame frenetic economic growth, the
nation's top environment official said.
Zhou Shengxian, head of China's State Environmental
Protection Administration, said government efforts to cut sulphur dioxide and
other pollutants belching into China's hazy skies were failing, the China
Environment News reported on Wednesday.
A power plant on the outskirts of Zhangjiakou.
More than 1,500 factories in southern China had been closed down in the
past three years due to the pollution and environmental hazards they
posed. [AFP]
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Breakneck economic expansion was instead overwhelming official goals to cut
emissions and energy use, he said in a speech to officials on Tuesday.
"The central leadership is treating reductions in energy use and major
pollutant emissions as two major hard targets -- red lines that can't be
crossed," he was quoted as saying.
Zhou urged environmental officials to latch on to the ruling Communist Party
leadership's determination to cool the economy in a fresh effort to cut
pollution.
"The party central leadership and State Council are using reduction of major
pollutants as an important means to promote coordinated, sustainable
development," he said, referring to China's cabinet.
China has promised to clean its dirty skies for the 2008 Beijing Olympics,
and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has made green development a key theme of his
administration.
But Zhou said giddy investment in steel mills, cement plants, coal-fired
power stations and other emissions-heavy industries was defeating pollution
limits. He promised a campaign to vet planned projects, especially those with
investment of 100 million yuan (US$12.5 million) or more.
China has become the world's top emitter of acid rain-causing sulphur
dioxide, with discharges rising 27 percent from 2000 to 2005, mostly from
coal-burning power stations, SEPA officials said earlier this month.
Zhou said estimates from 17 Chinese provinces indicated that discharges grew
another 5.8 percent last year.
"We must face up to the fact that in the first half of the year emissions of
major pollutants nationwide didn't fall, but rose," Zhou said.
"Investment in some pollution-related industries accelerated," he added,
noting investment in coal mining and processing grew 45.7 percent compared to
the first half of last year.
But the government's determination to tame growth -- which hit 11.3 percent
in the second quarter compared to the year-earlier period -- was an opportunity
for environmental enforcers, Zhou said.
Wen has ordered local governments to establish accountability rules for
implementing caps on sulphur dioxide and other pollutants, and demanded that
local officials face inspections for pollution control, Zhou said.
"Implementing reduction goals for major pollutants is the key focus of our
work in the second half of the year," he said, warning officials that they
should not assume the government's five-year plan for reining in pollution gave
them ample time.
(US$1=7.981 Yuan)