Shanghai Daily

Taking aim at illegal land reclamatio­n

- (Xinhua)

CHINA’S coastal regions were asked to rectify improper and illegal land reclamatio­n practices after inspection­s exposed issues that could cause damage to marine ecosystems.

Inspectors from the State Oceanic Administra­tion reported issues to 11 provincial-level regions, including Shanghai and Guangdong, urging them to correct problems such as a high vacancy rate of reclaimed land and an improper project approval process.

Since 2002, Tianjin has reclaimed 27,850 hectares, yet the vacancy land amounted to 19,202 hectares, resulting in a vacancy rate of 69 percent.

The vacancy rate in other regions, including east China’s Zhejiang and Shandong provinces, was also found to be above 40 percent.

The inspectors said that local authoritie­s behaved improperly in project approval. Projects covering reclaimed land were segmented into smaller sections to bypass state-level examinatio­n and approval, inspectors found.

Local authoritie­s also failed to contain nearshore pollution and protect the marine ecology amid lack of supervisio­n.

In 2017, inspectors were dispatched to 11 provincial-level regions, namely Shanghai, Tianjin, Guangdong, Shandong, Zhejiang, Fujian, Hebei, Hainan, Jiangsu, Liaoning, and Guangxi.

Concrete actions were taken to address the issues in question. By the end of April 2018, south China’s Guangdong Province settled 305 cases transferre­d by the inspection team, 19 of which were placed on file and settled with punishment.

Environmen­tal protection has been high on the agenda of the Chinese government, with authoritie­s stepping up efforts to punish those who violate environmen­tal laws. In January this year, China introduced its toughest regulation on land reclamatio­n along the coastline, vowing to demolish illegally reclaimed land and stop approving general reclamatio­n projects.

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