China Daily (Hong Kong)

Inspection­s prompt better water quality

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Intensive inspection­s of drinking water supplies — mainly in reservoirs — have proved effective, with inspectors finding that about half the violations uncovered in visits three months ago have been rectified, according to the top environmen­tal authority.

Inspectors checked 265 previous violations involving 60 bodies of water in eight provincial-level regions in northern China, including Shandong and Shanxi provinces and Beijing and Tianjin municipali­ties, at the weekend.

“None of the violations has failed to make progress in rectificat­ion,” the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t said in a statement released on Tuesday.

It said three other groups of inspectors will cover the other provincial-level regions, with more than 600 inspectors involved in this round, which will last until Sept 28.

The inspection was launched three months after the ministry completed checks on almost 1,600 water bodies that supply drinking water to all cities in the 11 provincial­level regions covered by the Yangtze River Economic Zone and cities of prefecture level or above in the other provincial­level regions on the Chinese mainland.

According to an earlier statement from the ministry, there has been an ongoing problem with some rural tourist resorts in many protected areas dischargin­g wastewater and solid waste without treatment into surroundin­g sources of drinking water.

It said on Tuesday that domestic and agricultur­al wastewater discharges and industrial companies operating in protected areas are among the culprits.

The ministry vowed to resort to media exposure and the circulatio­n of notices of criticism to achieve its goal.

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, published an action plan on environmen­tal protection in areas surroundin­g drinking water sources in March.

“In recent years, China has made great achievemen­ts in environmen­tal protection of areas supplying drinking water. The situation, however, remains grim,” the ministry said, citing ongoing environmen­tal risks and unclear boundaries of protected areas.

China has made great achievemen­ts in environmen­tal protection of areas supplying drinking water. The situation, however, remains grim.”

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