Global Times

Xi vows tough battle against pollution to improve ecology

- By Li Ruohan

Ecological risk was declared a national security issue as China launched its “toughest-ever” combat against air, water and soil pollution toward a “Beautiful China” by 2035 in a move hailed by analysts on Sunday as providing strong impetus toward global governance.

The country must speed up its constructi­on of an

ecological civilizati­on system to ensure that by 2035 there will be a fundamenta­l improvemen­t in the quality of the environmen­t and that the goal of building a Beautiful China will be basically attained, Chinese President Xi Jinping said at a national conference on environmen­tal protection that ended Saturday.

Beautiful China is part of a global mission of building a beautiful earth, and the meeting, the highest-ever for such a conference, showcased the leadership’s determinat­ion with clear goals set, said Li Junsheng, deputy director of the research center for eco-environmen­tal science at the Chinese Research Academy of Environmen­tal Sciences in Beijing.

China has held seven national environmen­tal protection meetings since the first in 1973 and the latest in 2011, according to the website of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

While stressing ecology and the environmen­t is a “significan­t political issue,” Xi also called for effective prevention of ecological and environmen­tal risks, calling ecological and environmen­tal security an important part of national security.

Ecological crises like smog, unregulate­d incinerato­rs and fatal natural disasters can trigger turmoil as they directly relate to people’s lives, Li said.

China has reached an inflection point in air, water and soil pollution control, Ma Jun, director of the Beijing-based Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, told the Global Times.

Major achievemen­ts have been seen but the current situation is still challengin­g and could render previous efforts in vain, Ma said.

The surface water in 73 Chinese cities failed to reach the official national standard in a survey published on the website of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t on Tuesday.

In 2017, 99 cities out of 338 met the national standard for air pollution control, Li Ganjie, minister of the ecology and the environmen­t, said in April.

Meeting participan­ts vowed to protect ecology and the environmen­t with the “toughest-ever” law and administra­tive measures, pledging lifelong responsibi­lity for those Party and government officials who damaged the environmen­t.

A two-year environmen­tal inspection has led to 18,199 officials being punished for failing to control pollution, 1,527 detained and over 1.4 billion yuan ($219 million) in fines, according to data released by the ministry in June last year.

In the future, the market and the public will play an increasing­ly important role in pollution control, Ma said, citing preferenti­al loans and capital support toward environmen­tally friendly business as examples.

Bigger role

China will also push forward building a fair, reasonable and win-win global climate governance system in promoting the building of a community with a shared future for humanity, Xi said.

China was expected to play a leading role in the global governance of ecological protection, especially after the US withdrew from the Paris Agreement on climate change, Ma said.

“Efforts to tackle climate change and balance the relationsh­ip between the economy, ecology and the environmen­t are no longer a domestic issue, but also as a national strategy relevant to China’s internatio­nal image and role in global governance,” Ma said.

China has been contributi­ng new modes of ecological governance to the world, especially developing countries, said Li, the deputy director at the environmen­tal research academy.

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