Global Times - Weekend

Uphill struggle

China’s first environmen­tal chief content with today’s progress

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Qu Geping, 89, became China’s first environmen­tal protection chief in 1987, when the bureau of environmen­t protection was founded. The bureau has become the current Ministry of Environmen­t and Ecology (MEE).

Qu began his environmen­tal protection career in the 1970s, when there was not much awareness in China of this concept.

Over the past decades, Qu has witnessed the difficulti­es faced by China in this area. He likens the struggle to the legend of Sisyphus pushing the giant stone to the peak.

Luckily, China’s environmen­tal protection efforts are on the right track.

“I have been working in the environmen­t sector for almost 50 years, and had never seen such a good situation as there is now,” Qu said in an interview with the Southern Weekly. The report was posted on the official website of the MEE.

Revealing pollution

Qu was a member of the first Chinese government delegation to the first United Nations Environmen­t Program, the first director of the Chinese environmen­tal protection bureau.

However, he does not like people calling him “the father of Chinese environmen­tal protection,” as he believes that title should be given to former Chinese premier Zhou Enlai, who set China on the road to environmen­tal protection.

Looking back, Qu said that environmen­tal protection work in China has been “extremely difficult.”

Although he has spent his entire career in the field, he believes he entered the sector by accident.

Qu first learned about environmen­tal issues and its effects on social and economic developmen­t in 1972 in Stockholm, Sweden, during the United Nations Conference on the Human Environmen­t. That was when Qu realized the e potential threat that environmen­tal problems posed to China.

The first national environmen­tal protection conference was held in 1973. Even back then, the situation in China was severe. “Air pollution, water pollution, garbage, chemical pollution… it was already very serious,” Qu said.

However, Chinese people at that time did not have a clue about the concept of “environmen­tal protection.”

Back in the 1960s and 1970s, Chinese people believed there was no pollution in China. But in reality, Guanting Reservoir and Baiyangdia­n Lake near Beijing, as well as the famous Lijiang River in Guilin, South China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, were all severely polluted, Qu said, the China Youth Daily reported.

Qu and the organizers of the conference distribute­d a document revealing the environmen­tal problems in China.

The facts shocked the attendants, and that was the beginning of China’s pollution management drive.

Facing the truth

In the early 1980s, Qu decided to report the truth of the environmen­tal situation to the central government, the China Youth Daily reported.

After a bold investigat­ion, he handed in some “terrifying” data, indicating that environmen­tal pollution and ecological damage were resulting in annual economic losses of 95 billion yuan at that time in China, accounting for 14 percent of output value. “Environmen­tal problems had become a great barrier and threat to domestic economic developmen­t.”

Because of the report, former vice p pre premier Wan Li decided to hold ano a another national environmen­tal p pro protection conference in 1983, calli ing for the whole of society to pay atte a attention to environmen­tal issues.

In January 1984, environmen­tal protection became a strategic task for China’s modernizat­ion constructi­on, as well as an important national policy.

In 1987, Qu became the first chief of the national environmen­tal protection bureau.

During Qu’s career at the front line of battling pollution and protecting the environmen­t, he put forward the idea that economic, urban-rural and environmen­t constructi­on should be developed at the same pace.

He also initiated the environmen­tal system of “those who pollute must resolve,” which became the foundation of environmen­tal management in China. At the same time, he made great efforts in promoting legislatio­n for environmen­tal and resource protection.

“The environmen­t is different from other department­s. It’s very broad,” Qu said, “It involves every industry in the economy. It was impossible to imagine that [to protect the environmen­t], key companies, government­al department­s and regions all had to take action.”

A better time

Qu remembered that during a national air pollution resolution conference in Taiyuan, North China’s Shanxi Province in 1987, pollution was severe in China.

“An attendant told me that he rode a bicycle to his workplace, which took 30 minutes. Without glasses, dust would often enter his eyes after the ride. With glasses, his face would become like a ‘panda.’ His trousers were also covered with dust.”

In the interview with the Southern Weekly earlier this year, Qu admitted that there are still many places where China falls short on the environmen­t, but protection quality has improved a great deal around the country.

“Today in Taiyuan, even if a shirt is left outside for three to five days, it would not be dirtier than a shirt left outside for one hour in 1980s. This is an achievemen­t that makes environmen­t protectors like me relieved,” he said.

Since the 18th Communist Party of China National Congress in 2012, environmen­tal protection work has been placed in a central position in the government’s key strategies, Qu said. “The change is massive.”

In his opinion, only with nationalle­vel attention and investment can environmen­t and ecology work be guaranteed.

“Comparing the past and now, we can all see the change. I am optimistic,” he said.

Qu is also one of the pioneers of environmen­tal protection education, making great contributi­on to developing higher education, profession­al education and public education on the environmen­t.

On June 15, a symposium themed “Qu Geping devoted to environmen­tal protection for 50 years” was held at Beijing’s Tsinghua University, according to the website of the university.

“The generation of environmen­tal protectors like me has no regrets about what we have done, and we are confident about the future,” Qu said.

 ?? Photos: VCG ?? A clear sky is seen in Beijing on August 29, 2019. Inset: Qu Geping (right)
Photos: VCG A clear sky is seen in Beijing on August 29, 2019. Inset: Qu Geping (right)
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