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Nationwide pollution census to start in next month
BEIJING—The first national
survey of pollution sources is to start in February, the State
Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) said here Friday.
The survey will identify sources of industrial, agricultural and
residential pollution and also calculate the number of environmental
remediation facilities in operation, said Zhou Shengxian, the SEPA
director, during a meeting held by the State Council. It will take about
two months to collect the data and each piece of information will be
reviewed four times before being entered into the database, he said.
To maintain quality, random data samples will be checked again, he
added. The headquarters of the census has been established, comprised of
officials from the SEPA and the Ministry of Agriculture, which manages
agricultural pollution. Every province, autonomous region and
municipality has also setup an office to take charge of the census. “The
result of the census will not be linked to any punishment or evaluation
of the performance of local administrations,” Zhou said. Any
administration, company or institution should not fear repercussions but
should instead guarantee true, credible results, he said.
The country has been preparing for the census for more than a year. The
central government allocated 737 million yuan (100 million U.S. dollars)
to preparations in 2007. The government is taking numerous measures to
reduce pollution, but experts have complained about a lack of
trustworthy statistics on the sources and extent of pollution and the
number of remediation facilities. These complaints led to the decision
by the State Council in October 2006 to conduct the census. “Collecting
data of various pollution sources will be an important basis for
environmental protection, a crucial gist for optimizing economic
structure and an important step toward an environment-friendly society,”
said Chinese Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan at the same conference.
Meanwhile, environment statistics, monitoring and assessment systems
should be improved, Zeng stressed, adding that findings of the pollution
sources survey should be developed and applied. Data collection will be
completed in the first half of the year, and the data collected will be
analyzed in the second half. In the first half of 2009, the survey
findings will be examined and approved. China faces the challenge of
environmental deterioration amid its rapid economic development.
According to the SEPA, sulfur dioxide emissions in 2005 were 27.8
percent higher than in 2000. During that same period, chemical oxygen
demand (COD), a major index of water pollution, fell only 2.1 percent.
Water pollution has been worsening as well: 26 percent of surface water
is totally unusable, 62 percent is unsuitable for fish and 90 percent of
the rivers running through cities are polluted.
But, due to the persistent efforts, China managed to reduce the emission
of main pollutants, sulfur dioxide and chemical oxygen demand (COD) in
the first nine months of 2007. The energy consumption per unit of gross
domestic product (GDP) also dropped three percent year-on-year in the
first three quarters of last year. Six enterprises in east China’s
Zhejiang Province published a letter of apology in a local newspaper on
Thursday, saying they are sorry for polluting the environment and would
rectify the situation. And at the same time, 23 factories in southwest
China’s Sichuan Province had shut down or suspended production for
failures in pollution control.
The remorseful enterprises in Zhejiang included two paper mills, two
electroplating factories and two printing and dyeing factories. They
were ordered to apologize to the public by the municipal bureau of
environment protection of Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang. They were also
fined. Dai Beijun, chief of the provincial environmental watchdog, said
the apology order “is meant to shame pollution enterprises and their
executives and ensure that the public know what happens. We want to tell
the enterprises that the public detest pollution”.
In the Hangzhou Daily letter, legal representatives of the six
enterprises said “we have been found discharging excessive pollution
recently.—Xinhua |