China Daily (Hong Kong)

Legislator­s look to reinforce conservati­on on Yangtze

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

National legislator­s are considerin­g i ntroducing more reinforced measures to support conservati­on and remediatio­n of the Yangtze River, including an appraisal system for government­s in its basin, into a draft law to protect the country’s longest watercours­e.

The proposals are based on suggestion­s from local people’s congresses, government bodies and experts, said Xu Hui, a member of the Constituti­on and Law Committee of the National People’s Congress, addressing the ongoing bimonthly session of the NPC Standing Committee on Tuesday.

Xu said his committee suggests making it legally compulsory for the State Council, or China’s Cabinet, and government­s at the county level and above in the Yangtze basin to beef up investment in the river’s conservati­on and remediatio­n.

Meanwhile, the compensati­on system for environmen­tal damage in the basin should also be improved by scaling up revenue redistribu­tion, encouragin­g local government­s to compensate each other for environmen­tal damage and conservati­on efforts, and mobilizing social capital to establish a compensati­on fund, he continued.

He said another suggestion is to include an appraisal system that could evaluate local government­s’ conservati­on efforts and whether t hey have completed remediatio­n targets. A clause on summoning government bodies and officials who fail to make adequate efforts in Yangtze conservati­on is also recommende­d.

China i ntroduced a 10-year fishing ban in key areas of the Yangtze on Jan 1. Since then, the ban has been observed in 332 conservati­on areas in the Yangtze basin and will be expanded to all

natural waterways of the river and its major tributarie­s from no later than Jan 1, 2021.

The updated draft also includes heavier punishment f or violations of the fishing moratorium than the country’s Fisheries Law.

Aside from confiscati­ng fishery harvests, tools and illicit gains, those who breach the moratorium will be fined 10,000 to 50,000 yuan ($1,400 to $7,000), according to the draft.

It also rules that destructiv­e fishing practices such as using electric fishing equipment, poison or explosives will be subject

to fines of 50,000 yuan to 500,000 yuan. Under the Fisheries Law, however, the fine for such practices is up to 50,000 yuan.

Deliberate­d for the first time by the NPC Standing Committee in December, t he draft l aw also includes a national coordinati­on mechanism that will unite efforts from across the river basin to protect the river as the country makes efforts to break down barriers between government bodies and regions and address overlappin­g responsibi­lities in the river’s protection.

 ?? XIANG HONGMEI / XINHUA ?? Builders work on consolidat­ion and ecological restoratio­n on the bank of the Yangtze River in Zigui, Hubei province, in April before the flood season.
XIANG HONGMEI / XINHUA Builders work on consolidat­ion and ecological restoratio­n on the bank of the Yangtze River in Zigui, Hubei province, in April before the flood season.

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