11 polluting plants told to clean up their act (China Daily/Agencies) Updated: 2006-02-08 06:10
Petrochemical industry to be monitored
SEPA plans conduct environmental assessments on 127 petrochemical plants
following a series of serious pollution disasters, said Pan.
Pan's agency has started to carry out environmental risk assessment on those
plants along rivers and in areas with dense populations or nature reserves.
"The chemical industry is an obvious area were hidden dangers could result in
both regional and structural environmental problems," said Pan in a statement on
the agency's website.
The 127 plants, with some 450 billion yuan (55.7 billion dollars) in
investment, were considered key plants in the industry, he said.
Pan said a recent toxic spill in the northeast province of Heilongjiang also
spurred the administration into action.
The benzene spill on the Songhua river in November resulted in public water
supplies to four million residents of Harbin, while threatening Russian water
supplies down river.
"Recently, a series of serious environmental emergencies, most notably the
Songhua river pollution incident, has resulted in great losses to public health,
social stability, economic growth and even to our diplomatic efforts," Pan said.
Tuesday's statements came a day after SEPA pledged to establish a public
disclosure system on environmental disasters after announcing that 45 pollution
incidents, including six major disasters, had occurred in China since the
Songhua river spill.
A combination of rapid economic development and continued population growth
means China is putting unsustainable pressure on its water resources.
Previous government reports have said that more than 70 percent of China's
rivers and lakes are polluted, while underground water in 90 percent of Chinese
cities is polluted.
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