China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Timetable’ needed to phase out pollution

Senior legislator says road map should be clear, incentives would help companies

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

A senior national legislator and leading environmen­tal expert has called on the government to set a transition­al strategy with transparen­t, predictabl­e and gradually tighter policies for governing industrial pollution as the country switches to green, low-carbon and high-quality developmen­t.

Professor Wang Yi, a member of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress and the NPC Committee of Environmen­t Protection and Resource Conservati­on, made the comment in an interview with China Daily on the sidelines of the NPC session on Tuesday.

He also said companies should be given performanc­e-based incentives to go green.

Most companies will not go green themselves unless guided by policies and standards, Wang said.

“You have to make them well-informed that they will have to pay a price for failure to meet pollution discharge standards,” he said.

He added, however, that the government cannot raise the standards in a single leap.

“There should be a road map, timetable and prioritiza­tion for implementa­tion of environmen­tal policies and pollution discharge standards in a phased manner, and enterprise­s should be clearly informed about it,” he said.

Comparing environmen­tal management to traffic lights, he said many red and green lights are currently in place, but no flashing yellow lights to indicate a grace period. They are seldom used in environmen­tal law enforcemen­t in the country, he said.

China’s commitment to a green and high-quality developmen­t path cannot be fulfilled in one stroke but must be done step by step, he said.

The government should also adjust its anti-pollution policies in light of structural changes and the processes of production and consumptio­n, rather than concentrat­ing mainly on end-of-pipe pollution control, Wang said.

“Environmen­tal protection and green developmen­t are hot topics in China. Most of the authoritie­s’ measures to reach the goal, however, are about restrictio­ns. Few incentives are available,” he said.

The government should offer incentives to reward companies that stand out in reducing their discharges, instead of only imposing penalties on environmen­tal violators.

According to the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, fines imposed for environmen­tal violations increased by 32 percent yearon-year to almost 15.3 billion yuan ($2.3 billion) in 2018.

While the government could encourage favorable loan rates for companies with outstandin­g performanc­e in the green transition, another approach worth trying might be the establishm­ent of a green transition and developmen­t fund to reward such enterprise­s, he said.

He said the government could initiate such a fund either by using the money collected from environmen­tal violators or by setting up a special budget.

The central authoritie­s have attached great importance to green developmen­t. During a panel discussion with NPC deputies from the Inner Mongolia autonomous region on March 5, President Xi Jinping warned against the tendency of sacrificin­g the environmen­t for economic growth and said no sacrifice of the environmen­t is allowed when encounteri­ng “just a little difficulty in economic developmen­t”.

In this year’s Government Work Report delivered to the national legislatur­e on the same day, Premier Li Keqiang referred to green developmen­t as “a critical element of modernizin­g an economy” and “a fundamenta­l solution to pollution”.

There should be a road map, timetable and prioritiza­tion for implementa­tion of environmen­tal policies and pollution discharge standards.” Wang Wang Yi, Yi, a a member member of of the the NPC NPC Committee Committee of of Environmen­t Environmen­t Protection Protection and and Resource Resource Conservati­on Conservati­on

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