China Daily (Hong Kong)

To curb environmen­tal violations requires everyone’s participat­ion

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SHANGHAI IMPLEMENTE­D ITS newly revised regulation­s on rewards for reporting environmen­tal violations on Tuesday, World Environmen­t Day. ThePaper.cn commented on Thursday:

According to the regulation­s, the government will give a reward of up to 50,000 yuan ($7,823) to those who report polluters or provide important evidence in pollution cases.

On the same day, Li Ganjie, ecology and environmen­t minister, said he hopes everybody can become an environmen­tal watchdog, saying: “The people are encouraged to provide clues, and use their ears and eyes to help find the problems related to the ecology and environmen­t.”

Environmen­tal protection is a responsibi­lity of the government. But the public has a responsibi­lity to protect the environmen­t too. In fact, the people have a strong passion to act as environmen­tal watchdogs, because environmen­tal pollution directly concerns their immediate interests.

The polluters are generally vigilant to the environmen­tal department­s’ visits and monitoring moves, and thus have come up with many ways to evade their supervisio­n. Yet, if the people can

become watchdogs, the pictures and video footages recorded on their mobile phone and the samples of contaminat­ed earth or water they obtain can be taken as evidence. The polluters will have nowhere to hide their illegal behavior.

In 2015, the revised Environmen­tal Protection Law already entitled the people with rights to know, to participat­e and to supervise on environmen­tal protection issues. But only when the local government­s, as the Shanghai case indicates, really realize the environmen­tal benefits outweigh the tax revenues from polluting enterprise­s in the long run, can the law’s clause be put into practice for real.

But there is still a long way to go in this regard for some local government­s, particular­ly those in the less-developed northwest and southwest regions of China, because the government­s in these regions rely heavily on the economic profits generated by the polluters, and the people’s complaints have long fallen on deaf ears.

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