Pollution blights many cities in China By Qin Chuan (China Daily) Updated: 2005-06-03 00:53
More than half of 500 Chinese cities failed to meet national air quality
standards last year.
The areas suffered potentially harmful air quality, a survey of 500 cities by
the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) claims.
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A
small cement plant, one of more than a dozen in Yongshan, a town in
Jingdezhen, Jiangxi Province, East China, belches out smoke and dust
yesterday. Locals are concerned of the damage to health.
[newsphoto] | And nearly one-third of
non-industrial sewage in the cities went untreated. In 193 other cities, no
treatment was carried out at all, the report revealed.
The findings are likely to cause widespread concern.
As urbanization speeds up in China -- posing increasing pressure on the urban
environment -- the Chinese Government has given top priority to environmental
protection in cities.
But given the latest findings, such protection has yet to yield notable
results.
There are 661 cities in China -- home to 41.7 per cent of the population.
The metropolis also generate 65.5 per cent of the nation's gross domestic
product -- but all at a huge cost to the environment.
Wang Jirong, vice-minister of the administration, said told journalists
yesterday in Beijing: "In the past two decades, China has been facing
environmental problems which developed countries met with over one century."
Making reasonable development plans, building sufficient and effectively
operated infrastructure and continuing the improvement of urban environment are
among the recommended measures, SEPA's release said.
The administration started to examine environmental management and
improvement in 1989.
According to Wang Yuqing, joint SEPA vice-minister, the number of complaints
about environmental problems in China has been growing by 30 per cent annually,
showing that pollution has a serious impact on the quality of life of the
public.
New experiments
Wang said the three cities -- Guiyang in Southwest China's Guizhou Province,
Rizhao in East China's Shandong Province and Zhangjiagang in East China's
Jiangsu Province -- are experimenting with a circular, or recycling, economy
under the administration's instruction.
A circular economy, the most efficient use of energy and resources, is being
widely promoted as a way to address a widely held view that economic development
and environmental protection are often at odds with each other.
Guiyang's legislature even passed a regulation on developing the circular
economies, which is the country's first of its kind, Wang said.
In addition, the administration is helping the National Development and
Reform Commission to design policies that are expected to develop circular
economies across the country, he added.
To encourage cities, the administration has so far labelled 47 as national
models for environmental protection. This scheme started in 1997.
More than 100 cities are asking to take part in the programme, according to
the administration's release.
The report comes just days ahead of World Environment Day which falls this
Sunday.
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