Global Times

Environmen­tal laws to be strengthen­ed

- By Liu Xin

China has been giving importance to environmen­tal protection since 2012, implementi­ng stricter laws and actively participat­ing in global environmen­tal governance.

Experts said this is in line with China’s need for economic restructur­ing.

China has strengthen­ed efforts to preserve the ecological balance since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in 2012 with new energy developmen­t and anti-smog regulation­s, Ning Jizhe, head of China’s National Bureau of Statistics, told a press conference on Tuesday.

“Among the 338 monitored cities, 24.9 percent achieved the air quality standard in 2016, 3.3 percentage points higher than in 2015 … Water samples from 73.4 percent of the monitoring points achieved national first or second level in 2016, four percentage points higher than in 2012,” Ning said.

“Ecological protection has been given priority since 2012 because it affects people’s health, sustainabl­e developmen­t and the welfare of the next generation. China’s pollution problem could no longer be ignored,” Ma Jun, director of

the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, told the Global Times.

Ma said regulators have taken unpreceden­ted measures to protect the environmen­t since 2012 because the public has been demanding clean air and water.

Chinese President Xi Jinping said at the sixth group study session of the Political Bureau of the 18th CPC Central Committee in 2013 that “the 18th National Congress of the CPC listed ecological progress along with economic, political, cultural and social progress as the five goals in the overall plan for the cause of Chinese socialism.”

Xi also noted that “our efforts for ecological and environmen­tal protection will benefit future generation­s. We must be aware that it is an urgent and challengin­g task to protect the environmen­t and control pollution.”

“China has achieved some progress on environmen­tal protection, including the passing of new laws, enhancing law enforcemen­t, and conducting nationwide inspection­s to get local government­s involved,” Ma said, adding that the public has benefited from these measures.

China’s revised Environmen­tal Protection Law, considered the toughest in history, took effect in January 2015. It slaps additional daily fines on companies or factories that fail to correct violations, and provides for penalties on local officials who fail to fulfill their duties.

China has also drafted other laws related to environmen­tal protection, including the Air Pollution Control Law, the Water Pollution Prevention and Control Law, China’s Environmen­tal Impact Assessment Law and the Nuclear Security Law.

Ma added that regulators have encouraged greater public involvemen­t in environmen­tal protection since 2012. This includes exposing environmen­tal protection violators.

A draft regulation on the environmen­tal informatio­n disclosure of enterprise­s and public institutio­ns states that those who provide bogus data or refuse to release data in accordance with regulation­s could be fined up to 30,000 yuan, the Xinhua News Agency reported in September.

Lasting priority

Stressing the need for environmen­tal protection and low-carbon developmen­t is consistent with China’s ongoing economic restructur­ing and clean energy campaign to help lift some remote areas from poverty, Yang Fuqiang, senior adviser on climate and energy at the Natural Resources Defense Council, told the Global Times.

Aside from tackling domestic environmen­tal issues, China has also been involved in global environmen­tal governance, which includes faithfully implementi­ng the Paris Agreement after the US withdrawal.

Environmen­tal protection will continue to be given priority, with additional measures expected in the next five years after the 19th CPC National Congress, scheduled to begin on October 18, experts said.

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