China Daily (Hong Kong)

Dual approach can clean up smog-stricken areas

- SOUTH CHINA’S GUANGXI ZHUANG AUTONOMOUS REGION

was recently praised by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection for managing to keep pollution at satisfacto­ry levels during the past three years. Beijing News commented on Tuesday:

Guangxi’s success is indeed praisewort­hy, especially as six cities in North China’s Hebei province, Central China’s Henan province and East China’s Shandong province have just been named and shamed for failing to curb air pollution.

The autonomous region, according to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection, has been open to technologi­cal innovation­s such as using drones and satellites to locate pollution, while urging local police to hold polluters accountabl­e as fast as possible.

Such efforts have paid off, making Guangxi a rare environmen­t friendly example among less-developed areas, many of which tend to put GDP growth before environmen­tal protection.

But it should be borne in mind that Guangxi’s environmen­tal protection officials were only given credit for doing their job, and it is their counterpar­ts in other provinces and regions that have failed in their duties.

For some reason, it is no longer news that local government­s are criticized for being too “soft” on enterprise­s that discharge excessive pollutants. Their

struggle to deal with massive emissions violations by polluting companies has something to do with the fact that many heavy polluters remain a staple of local growth.

The revised Environmen­tal Protection Law should be a cure to the soft enforcemen­t, but there is still a long way to go to implement it. Charging polluting enterprise­s on a daily basis and shutting down those that disobey the law are measures yet to be effectivel­y carried out across the country. The reason is self-evident.

The weak enforcemen­t of the environmen­tal protection regulation­s explains why Chen Jining, the minister of environmen­tal protection, stressed the need to strengthen inspection­s of government­s so as to prompt them to fulfill their duties.

He has also urged the shutdown of small yet highly polluting companies, which consume large amounts of coal and discharge much pollution. Hopefully this “dual approach” will help to clean up the smog-stricken areas.

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