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China set to clamp down on polluting factories
Beijing—One morning this
summer, residents of Wuxi City, in China’s eastern Jiangsu Province,
awoke to find their beloved Taihu Lake had turned rancid. The water was
filled with a bloom of blue-green algae that gave off a rotten smell.
The water was tested to be undrinkable.
For almost three decades, the city had welcomed some of the world’s
biggest polluters to settle there. Churning out paper, photographic
film, dye, fertilizer, cement and other products for the global
marketplace, the businesses helped make Wuxi into one of the country’s
wealthiest industrial cities.
However, these firms also poisoned the province’s vast network of lakes,
rivers and canals. In late May, when the toxic sludge reached Taihu
Lake, which is the main source of potable water for Wuxi’s 5.8 million
residents, people turned on their taps and got only sludge.
City officials decided they’d had enough. In a series of radical
proclamations that sent shudders though the business community, Wuxi
declared itself a newly reformed “green city”, the Washington Post
reported on its Saturday edition. By the end of September, the city had
closed or given directives to close more than 1,340 polluting factories.
Wuxi ordered the rest to clean up by coming June or be permanently shut
down.
The actions were applauded by Premier Wen Jiabao, who has vowed to use
economic incentives and punishments to aid in environmental protection
and resource protection. Last week, the State Council, which Premier Wen
heads, approved an environmental plan that includes reducing major
pollutant discharges by 10 percent by 2010, a formidable challenge
facing the government but not a target unattainable, analysts said.
Plagued by worsening water shortage, choking on dusty air and alarmed by
a sharp rise in pollution-related diseases and deaths, China has been
searching for years for a way to fix its environment without hurting its
economy.
The Washington Post report quoted Elizabeth Economy, a fellow at the
Council on Foreign Relations and author of “The River Runs Black: The
Environmental Challenges to China’s Future,” as saying that, this time
“the commitment, the profile, the energy behind Beijing’s environmental
protection efforts far exceeds anything we’ve seen in China’s history.
“It’s not about new ideas, but about enforcement. . . . What is changing
are the incentives or disincentives, “ Economy told the Washington Post.
In 2007, some Chinese cities are taking measures that show that their
officials are beginning to make the environment a higher priority than
raising their GDP, a fundamental shift in thinking for a country that
can attribute much of its early-stage development to being the place to
which others outsourced their pollution, the Post report said.
And, the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA), a cabinet
ministry of the State Council, now is empowered with more teeth. It has
armed local governments with new tools for punishing polluters. Chinese
banks now have the right to deny loans to polluting companies, which are
on SPEA’s polluters blacklist.
And, SEPA officials are able to force violators to issue humiliating
public apologies in newspapers or television announcements detailing
their crimes. Also, utility companies are empowered to raise
electricity, gas or water rates for companies that consume too many
resources.
The result has been devastating for a growing number of companies, the
Washington Post reported.
In Heilongjiang province in the northeast, officials have announced that
they had kicked out 100 polluting enterprises that were sending
industrial runoff into a river that empties in Russia. In Shanxi
Province, China’s largest coal-mining area, officials have closed down
most industry in a county whose outdated machinery polluted waterways.
And in Inner Mongolia, the government closed a production facility for
one of China’s biggest companies, Mengniu Dairy, because it had been
operating without wastewater processing facilities and discharging waste
into the Yellow River.
Ventures that are fully or partly owned by foreigners have also been
caught in the inspections. This month, Unilever China, which makes soap,
shampoo and other cleaners, was fined and ordered to reduce production
because of excessive discharges.
Liu Yamin, chief of Wuxi’s Environmental Protection Bureau, acknowledged
that as the city transforms itself from dependence on industry to a
focus on high-tech research, there will be growing pains.
“The blue-green algae gave us a warning, a shock, but we Chinese have a
saying that a bad thing can be turned into a good thing,” Liu said.
Businesses say that the environmental measures are good in theory but
that they worry about unemployment and whether the laws are being
applied fairly.
Wuxi Dongtai Fine Chemical Industry was fined $13,000 and ordered to
stop making one of its products for failing to meet environmental
standards. The city said Dongtai leaked chemicals into a river that
flows into Tai Lake.
Feng Jing, Dongtai’s office manger, said the incident was minor, caused
by small cracks in its piping system, but that the punishment was
severe. As a result, the company laid off 50 of its 600 workers. |