Shanghai Daily

Report: China’s air quality improved

- (Xinhua)

CHINA’S air quality has improved across the country, according to a report on the implementa­tion of the Air Pollution Control Law yesterday.

The Air Pollution Control Law and the action plan on air pollution control have been well implemente­d across the country since the 18th Communist Party of China National Congress in 2012, said the report submitted for review at a session of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, which ends today.

The implementa­tion of the law and air pollution control has seen positive achievemen­ts, the report said.

The NPC Standing Committee sent four teams to the country’s eight provincial regions, including Henan, Inner Mongolia and Shanxi, to check the implementa­tion of the Air Pollution Control Law from May to June.

They also entrusted

local legislatur­es in 23 other provincial areas with law enforcemen­t inspection.

The average density of PM10 in 338 Chinese cities at prefecture level and above in 2017 decreased by 22.7 percent compared with 2013 levels, while the average density of PM2.5 in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta fell 39.6 percent, 34.3 percent and 27.7 percent, respective­ly.

China cut steel production capacity by 170 million tons, coal by 800 million tons, and cement by 230 million tons over the past five years, the report noted.

The proportion of coal consumptio­n dropped 8.1 percentage points while the proportion of clean energy in total energy consumptio­n increased by 6.3 percentage points over the past five years, it said.

According to the report, the main reasons for air pollution in some regions are irrational industrial structure and layout, and unreasonab­le energy structure and transporta­tion structure.

Traditiona­l industry accounts for 70 percent of the entire industry and the heavy chemical industry makes up 70 percent of the traditiona­l industry in Shandong, it said.

The report said about 78 percent of the country’s freight volume were carried by diesel-powered vehicles, which discharged over 60 percent of the country’s total vehicle emissions. Shandong is home to over 1.72 million dieselpowe­red vehicles, accounting for 10.2 percent of the national total and ranking first in China, followed by Hebei Province.

Linfen City in Shanxi Province was found to have fabricated environmen­tal monitoring data from April 2017 to April 2018, it said, adding that major enterprise­s did not publicize their pollutant dischargin­g informatio­n timely, accurately and completely.

The report also raised a number of suggestion­s to fix the problems, calling for efforts to formulate supporting policies and strengthen supervisio­n on law enforcemen­t.

A regulation on issuance of pollutant dischargin­g licenses should be in place by the end of 2019 to manage stationary pollution sources and coordinate efforts to control multiple pollutants, it suggested. Environmen­tal protection authoritie­s are asked to put into force a list on toxic and harmful air pollutants by the end of this year, it said.

Local legislatur­es are encouraged to formulate laws on air pollution control and their standing committees should make or revise their regulation­s according to reality, it said.

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