China Daily

High-level inspection teams prompt revision of anti-pollution measures

Central government inspectors blitzed local authoritie­s last year, promoting greater transparen­cy and solving long-standing problems. Zheng Jinran reports from Beijing, with Tian Xuefei in Harbin and Li Yingqing in Kunming.

- Contact the writer at zhengjinra­n@ chinadaily.com.cn

The New Year saw northern China shrouded in a cloud of thick smog that sent air pollution to hazardous levels and resulted in more than 60 cities imposing joint emergency measures, such as the suspension of manufactur­ing activity, to reduce emissions of noxious gases.

In addition to short-term emergency measures, the central government last year strengthen­ed supervisio­n of policymake­rs by introducin­g environmen­tal inspection­s conducted by high-level cadres.

The inspection­s have become a powerful weapon in the fight against pollution, in tandem with a number of long-term measures and environmen­tally-friendly policies adopted by the central government.

The teams of central inspectors, headed by ministeria­l-level cadres, debuted during a month-long inspection in Hebei province on Jan 4 last year. The 16 teams of investigat­ors conducted inspection­s in 16 provinces and regions, completing the final round of inspection­s on Dec 30, according to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

By the same date ,720 peoplehad been detained on charges of polluting the environmen­t, and fines were levied totaling more than 441 million yuan ($63 million), the ministry said.

However, rather than simply punishing polluting companies, the focus has now shifted to investigat­ing the actions of local government­s to “highlight the major roles played by policy-makers in environmen­tal issues”, said Chen Jining, the environmen­t minister.

The inspection­s in July saw more than 40,000 people at both the central and local levels participat­e in a campaign that focused on the provinces of Heilongjia­ng, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Henan, and Yunnan, and the Ningxia Hui, Inner Mongolia and Guangxi Zhuang autonomous regions.

From late November, the inspection teams visited seven more areas — the municipali­ties of Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing and provinces of Hubei, Guangdong, Shaanxi and Gansu.

By the end of this year, central-level inspection­s will cover every province, autonomous region and municipali­ty, according to Chen.

‘Accountabi­lity storm’

The high-level inspection teams, a developmen­t ordered by State Council, China’s Cabinet, play a similar role to that of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the nation’s top anti-graft watchdog, which regulates the activities of government officials and weeds out corruption.

Last year, the inspectors launched a large-scale “accountabi­lity storm” targeting government officials after some key leaders, who should play major roles in environmen­tal protection, failed to fulfill their responsibi­lities.

Unlike officials from the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection, which usually conducts pollution checks, the central inspectors have greater power to hold talks with leading provincial officials. In July, for example, they spoke with 195 provincial leaders to gauge their effectiven­ess in the fight against pollution.

Additional­ly, the teams investigat­ed reports filed by the public via a phone hotline and special email box, and conducted field investigat­ions into the issues that attracted the most attention.

In the 16 inspected regions, including several industrial­ized and well-developed areas, the inspectors exposed details of long-standing problems in full, thus emphasizin­g the central government’s determinat­ion to improve the environmen­t, according to experts.

The teams were allowed to speak frankly with local government­s to examine problems that had been swept under the carpet.

For example, even though the measures adopted by Zhengzhou, a city in Henan province, failed to achieve the 2015 target for the reduction of air pollution, the city government’s efforts received a favorable assessment. That was because the local assessors had failed to understand the importance of environmen­tal protection, said Wang Wanbin, head of the central inspection team that visited the province.

Weak implementa­tion

Similar neglect and weak implementa­tion of anti-pollution measures were also exposed in other provinces. For example, in 2007, the Yunnan provincial government published the Regulation on the Protection of Fuxian Lake, a well-known beauty spot.

However, despite the guidelines, a large number of illegal buildings such as hotels, apartments and villas with a combined floor area of 140,000 square meters, were constructe­d inside the protection zone. They were still on sale during the inspection­s.

Yang Chunming, deputy head of the Yunnan provincial environmen­tal protection bureau, said the province establishe­d special teams to solve problems immediatel­y after receiving the inspectors’ report.

“We have conducted a widerangin­g investigat­ion into the illegal constructi­on around Fuxian Lake,” Yang said, adding that any other problems uncovered should be treated equally seriously.

Zhang Benxing, a 73-yearold resident of Guilin, a city in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, said local people had frequently reported illegal quarrying, which released high levels of dust into the area around the Lijiang River, a famous scenic spot, but the problem was not solved until the arrival of the central inspection team.

In the weeks that followed, 37 officials at the county and city levels were deemed responsibl­e for the pollution caused by the illegal quarrying and for failing to prevent it.

In addition, other issues were highlighte­d, including the insufficie­nt attention local government­s paid to environmen­tal protection and the excessive exploitati­on of natural resources.

According to the inspectors, some regions have experience­d environmen­tal degradatio­n, such as declines in the quality of air, water and soil, pointing to areas where the provinces need to improve.

After the inspection­s, more than 6,400 government officialsw­ere held accountabl­e for the poor quality of their antipollut­ion work, resulting in punishment­s including suspension­s, public criticism and lost promotions, according to the ministry.

“From the problems exposed by the inspectors, we can see that they played hard when they monitored local government­s. That prompted policymake­rs to work harder to prevent pollution instead of focusing solely on economic growth,” said Qin Tianbao, professor of environmen­tal law at Wuhan University in Hubei province.

The performanc­es of local government­s have improved in the wake of the inspection­s, especially after officials witnessed the punishment­s meted out to their peers, so the irregular inspection mechanism needs to become a longterm measure, Qin said. “It would be better if there were laws to back up the inspection­s, ” he added.

The central inspection­s were conducted in accordance with trial regulation­s released by the State Council in July.

Many areas — such as Henan province and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region — have now set up their own inspection and investigat­ion teams to provide effective pollution control.

Chang Jiwen, deputy director of the Institute for Resources and Environmen­t Policies at the State Council’s developmen­t research center, a highlevel think tank, said the large number of cases uncovered indicated that progress has been made. He urged the central inspection teams to focus more on the activities of members of provincial and city government­s.

“Instead of punishing environmen­tal officials at the grassroots level, the teams should focus on leading policymake­rs in the provinces who have a far greater influence on environmen­tal policy,” he said.

Stricter controls

Messages left on the hotline and special email box exposed more than 26,000 heavily polluting companies, whose details were passed on to the relevant government­s. That resulted in the imposition of strict punishment­s, such as heavy fines and more than 20,000 businesses being ordered to suspend production.

“The strict investigat­ions provided solutions to many long-standing thorny problems,” said Chang, from the developmen­t research center.

In one case, a pharmaceut­ical factory in Hulunbuir, Inner Mongolia, was reported 80 times during the onemonth inspection period because of the pungent odor it released.

“Environmen­t bureaus at the city and autonomous region levels had punished the plant 29 times, using a combinatio­n of administra­tive penalties and short periods of detention, but it remained in production, generating the smell,” according to a statement released by the autonomous region’s government.

Following the inspection­s, the local government conducted a thorough investigat­ion, which resulted in two people at the plant being detained and production being suspended, the statement added.

Ma Yong, an environmen­tal law researcher at the Supreme People’s Court legal center, said the administra­tive punishment­s levied have not been strong enough to curb the activities of some polluters. However, the work of the central-level inspectors had helped the local government to impose tougher controls to rein in polluters. The measuresha­ve brought the problem under control in some regions.

Ma said it would be helpful if local government­s adopted legal measures against pollution, such as fully implementi­ng the revised Environmen­tal Protection Law, instead of relying on short-term inspection­s.

Zhang Xiaode, director of the Ecological Civilizati­on Research Center at the Chinese Academy of Governance, said the inspection­s had been effective and sent out a signal that the environmen­t is related to social and economic growth.

The investigat­ions have also helped the central and local government­s to formulate solutions to problems, resulting in more effective efforts to improve the environmen­t, he added.

From the problems exposed by the inspectors, we can see that they played hard when they monitored local government­s.” Qin Tianbao, professor of environmen­tal law at Wuhan University in Hubei province

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 ?? JASON LEE / REUTERS ?? People wear respirator­y masks in Beijing’s central business district during December after a red alert was issued for heavy air pollution.
JASON LEE / REUTERS People wear respirator­y masks in Beijing’s central business district during December after a red alert was issued for heavy air pollution.
 ?? CAI YANG / XINHUA ?? Environmen­tal inspectors dispatched by the central government examine a polluting power plant in Heze, Shandong province, in December.
CAI YANG / XINHUA Environmen­tal inspectors dispatched by the central government examine a polluting power plant in Heze, Shandong province, in December.

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