China Daily (Hong Kong)

Polluters fail to fix violations

Many problems not rectified before inspectors’ return visits

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

Law enforcemen­t officers dispatched by China’s top environmen­tal protection agency spotted a wide range of violations in Beijing, Tianjin and neighborin­g Hebei province in the latest round of inspection­s.

A total of 2,690 cases involving air pollution control law violations were spotted by 200 inspection teams dispatched by the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t in the area from June 11 to 24, the ministry said on Friday.

These included 355 failed attempts by local authoritie­s to shut down or upgrade high-emission enterprise­s, and 660 cases of enterprise­s dischargin­g industrial dust into the air without proper treatment, it said.

Other problems include factories failing to install pollution-control facilities or failing to operate them, and constructi­on sites or open mines failing to take proper measures to reduce emissions.

The ministry will supervise local government­s or enterprise­s as they carry out the required correction­s, it said.

The “blue sky” campaign, launched by the ministry on June 11, will last until April 28, and intensifie­d supervisio­n will extend from Beijing, Tianjin and neighborin­g Hebei province to 11 cities in other parts of China, including in Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces in August, and to the Yangtze River Delta in East China in winter, according to Tian Weiyong, chief for environmen­tal supervisio­n at the ministry.

“Supervisio­n teams will be dispatched to every county in these areas, and by winter this year about 1,000 inspectors will be working in all 80 cities in these areas to fight air pollution,” he said.

Beijing, Tianjin and much of Hebei province is one of the regions with the most serious air pollution in China. Peak seasons for pollution usually occur with the approach of winter in November, due to increased consumptio­n of coal for heating in North China.

A key task for air pollution control in the area in the winter will be discouragi­ng individual households from burning coal for heating, and using cleaner fuels instead, he said.

The ministry estimates an additional two to three million households in the area will switch to gas or electricit­y, Tian said.

Despite increases in public awareness for environmen­tal protection, China still faces severe challenges in environmen­tal protection, and environmen­tal law enforcemen­t needs to keep intensifyi­ng, he said.

In some places, inspectors dispatched by the ministry earlier this month have found enterprise­s that failed to rectify problems as required, and in some cases local government­s even took measures to help the enterprise­s conceal pollution for local economic developmen­t, according to the ministry.

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