China Daily (Hong Kong)

Editorial

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After the severe smog that repeatedly blighted Beijing over the winter, blue sky and clean air have accompanie­d the ongoing sessions of China’s top legislatur­e and political advisory body, where one of the hot issues is how to ensure people can enjoy more blue-sky days throughout the country. Air pollution is a pressing problem in large parts of China, but particular­ly in the north in winter when coal burning for heating exacerbate­s the problem of industrial and vehicle emissions.

In response to growing public concerns about the frequent smog, Premier Li Keqiang, delivering the Government Work Report on Sunday, pledged the government would “work faster” to address pollution caused by coal burning so as to “make our skies blue again”.

Significan­tly, this indicates the country’s leaders are aware both of what needs to be done and that it is the government, at all levels, which holds the key to bringing air pollution under control.

While coal burning, as the country’s main source of energy, is a large part of the problem, it draws attention to the fundamenta­l question, which is: What economic price is the country willing to pay to make blue skies the new normal nationwide?

Cutting excessive capacity in such polluting industries as steel, cement and petrochemi­cals while pushing forward industrial upgrading has proved effective in drasticall­y reducing air pollution, but as Chen Jining, minister of environmen­tal protection, told the media on Thursday, the fight for cleaner air is an uphill battle since it involves restructur­ing both the economy and the energy mix.

That battle may be tough, but it is one that cannot be avoided no matter how arduous it may be, and it is one local government­s must wholeheart­edly engage in.

Although it has some of the world’s strictest air pollution standards, polluters have always found a way around them because of the lax enforcemen­t by local government officials, especially at the county levels, as Chen noted while citing a recent inspection of the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

In this regard, expectatio­ns are high that the newly establishe­d environmen­tal police force can make a difference, as it is charged with rooting out collusion between local officials and factory operators and ensuring the country’s environmen­tal regulation­s are properly enforced at the local level.

There is still much to be done before we make our skies blue again, but the growing acceptance that economic growth alone cannot be the highest priority is a big step in the right direction.

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