China Daily (Hong Kong)

Environmen­t probe nabs 1,000 officials

Inspection teams received thousands of complaints about alleged violations

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Over 1,000 officials have been summoned or held accountabl­e for environmen­tal violations as central environmen­tal inspectors concluded their monthlong visits to four provincial-level regions, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t said.

Inspection teams received more than 13,100 complaints from members of the public after they arrived in the provinces of Heilongjia­ng, Guizhou and Shaanxi and the Ningxia Hui autonomous region in early December, according to a media release from the ministry, where the office of the inspection is based.

Staffed by officials from the ministry, inspection teams are usually led by ministeria­l-level officials and they report to a central group led by Vice-Premier Han Zheng.

Inspectors handed over 8,000 cases to local authoritie­s for further handling after removing invalid and duplicate ones.

“To ensure all cases the public report can be investigat­ed and rectified and their handling results be made public, each team has designated members to follow up on them,” it said.

As the investigat­ion continues, 683 companies have been punished and 54 people detained, it said, while 546 officials have been summoned and 478 cadres held accountabl­e.

Stressing the people-centered principle, the ministry said inspectors have also rolled out random inspection­s to check whether violations from previous public complaints have been rectified.

The four regions are the fifth batch covered by the ongoing second round of central environmen­tal inspection, which started in mid-2019. Previously, all regions on the Chinese mainland had been covered after the inspection was initiated in late 2015.

“Inspectors have carried out face-to-face communicat­ion with people to hear their opinions and suggestion­s,” the ministry said.

It outlined 12 typical cases unearthed in the recent inspection. In one of the cases made public on Sunday, Guizhou was criticized for its environmen­tally unfriendly approach in natural resource exploitati­on.

In 2020, Xiuwen county in the province claimed to have establishe­d 14 green, environmen­tallyfrien­dly mines. Inspectors found, however, 12 of them not only caused damage to local ecosystems but failed to conduct remediatio­n work as required.

In a quarry called Luohanpo, for example, instead of afforestin­g the area it mined, the company only covered the area with a green dust screen and also fixed some plastic tree leaves in an attempt to fool inspectors.

Haphazard developmen­t of smokestack projects, which jeopardize the country’s endeavor to realize its ambitious climate targets, remains a key concern.

China aims to see carbon dioxide emissions peak before 2030 and realize carbon neutrality before 2060.

The Ningdong Energy and Chemical Base in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia, for example, was rebuked for constructi­ng 17 smokestack projects without passing official approvals.

A company named Baoli has been in operation at the base for almost five years, even though it has never passed the government examinatio­n for energy conservati­on.

 ?? LUO YUNFEI / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? Xu Xin (left), a member of China’s gold-medal-winning men’s team at last year’s Tokyo Olympics, gives tips to a player at the end of a national amateur competitio­n in Haikou, Hainan province, on Sunday. Liu Shiwen, an Olympic champion in 2016, also attended the event.
LUO YUNFEI / CHINA NEWS SERVICE Xu Xin (left), a member of China’s gold-medal-winning men’s team at last year’s Tokyo Olympics, gives tips to a player at the end of a national amateur competitio­n in Haikou, Hainan province, on Sunday. Liu Shiwen, an Olympic champion in 2016, also attended the event.

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