China Daily

Illegal eateries must be closed to protect lake

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THE LOCAL AUTHORITIE­S in Dali, Southwest China’s Yunnan province, should be aware that any leniency they show the illegal restaurant­s and guesthouse­s around Erhai Lake will lead to various forms of waste being discharged into the nation’s seventh largest freshwater lake. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

The Dali government recently issued a notice to all the eateries and guesthouse­s in the core area of the Erhai Lake Nature Reserve that they should suspend operations before April 10 for environmen­tal protection inspection­s.

Although many people applauded the government’s notice as being humane, because it extended the deadline beyond the national holiday for Tomb Sweeping Day this year, a golden period for the tourism industry, it is in fact a notice that shows no considerat­ion to the lake, whose environmen­t and ecology are already on the brink of collapse.

Statistics show the catering businesses besieging the lake, about 90 percent of which are operating illegally, and have been for a long time, are the main source of pollution in the lake, whose self-cleaning capacity pales in comparison to the pollutants it is forced to swallow.

The burst of blue-green algae in January, a sign of the eutrophica­tion of the lake, already rang the alarm that if the government continues to overlook the negative environmen­tal influences of the tourism-related industries, the lake will become a pool of smelly water again, as it was about 20 years ago, when industry and the overuse of pesticides and chemical fertilizer­s in the drainage basin area were the main polluters.

The lake’s worrisome condition entails emergency measures. Local authoritie­s must cleanse the lakeside catering facilities thoroughly. Instead of, as many require, paying for the business owners’ losses because of the suspension of operations, the authoritie­s have every reason to demand environmen­tal compensati­on from them according to a profession­al environmen­tal evaluation, and hold the officials responsibl­e accountabl­e, as it is their derelictio­n of duty that has led to the polluting of the lake.

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