China Daily (Hong Kong)

Air quality data faked; officials punished

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The officials responsibl­e for deliberate­ly manipulati­ng data collected from nine air quality monitoring stations by using a spray of water have been severely punished, according to the country’s top environmen­tal authority.

Some of the officials were removed from their posts or demoted, while others were given warnings or demerits on their records, Liu Youbin, spokesman for the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, said on Thursday.

Liu, speaking at a news conference, did not disclose the number of officials who were punished but said the cases happened in seven cities in six provincial regions in December and January.

In one of the cases, seven people entered a monitoring station in Changde, Hunan province, where two of them sprayed water on air quality monitoring equipment, according to the ministry.

“The ministry will continue random inspection­s on environmen­tal monitoring work to ensure monitoring quality is maintained, and will have zero tolerance for any fraudulent collection of environmen­tal monitoring data. Any violations will be thoroughly investigat­ed,” he said.

Liu also said that more than 1,000 officials have been punished for failing to fulfill their environmen­tal protection duties in the second round of a nationwide comprehens­ive environmen­tal inspection.

While 10 of the officials were referred to judicial authoritie­s, the others were publicly named, admonished or given Party disciplina­ry and administra­tive punishment­s.

In addition to three officials at or above vice-ministeria­l levels, those punished included 159 prefecture-level and 464 county-level officials in either government or Party committee posts from seven

million

provincial regions, including Beijing and Shanghai, Liu said.

He said most officials were punished for derelictio­n of duty and violating regulation­s in decision-making and project approval.

According to the ministry, about 1,100 officials were held accountabl­e in the first round of environmen­tal inspection­s carried out in eight provincial regions.

Liu said inspection­s are expected to cover the whole country in another three years. In addition to the comprehens­ive inspection­s, other special random inspection­s targeting certain types of pollution will also be launched, and a long-term environmen­tal protection mechanism will be establishe­d to promote high-quality economic developmen­t.

China will mobilize about 600,000 people in a nationwide pollution census that will target 9 million enterprise­s, said Hong Yaxiong, head of the census office.

He said the enterprise­s are classified as polluting based on informatio­n provided by government bodies including the State Administra­tion for Industry and Commerce and the State Administra­tion of Taxation, and State-owned enterprise­s such as the State Grid Cooperatio­n of China.

The census team will consist of environmen­tal supervisor­s, each of whom is now responsibl­e for monitoring a small area, along with university student volunteers, he said.

Third-party organizati­ons will participat­e in the census, contributi­ng their expertise in calculatin­g pollutants to ensure data accuracy, he said.

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