China Daily

Polluted pools spur nationwide probe

- By ZHANG YU in Shijiazhua­ng and ZHENG JINRAN in Beijing

China has launched a thorough investigat­ion into the pollution of soil throughout the country and will release the final results to the public later, top environmen­tal protection officials said on Friday.

“I can declare today that the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection will treat all soil polluting cases with no tolerance once we have found them,” Tian Weiyong, head of the Environmen­tal Inspection Bureau under the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection, said on Friday, after an NGO discovered two untreated sewage pits filled with hazardous industrial waste.

Photos of the polluted pools, provided by the Chongqing Liangjiang Voluntary Service Center, went viral on Tuesday. The pits were found in Dacheng county of Langfang, Hebei province, and in Tianjin’s Jinghai district.

The ministry launched an investigat­ion with the Hebei government immediatel­y after the photos were shown online. According to the Langfang government, several officials of Dacheng

county in charge of environmen­tal protection have been suspended from their posts, and the local government has invited experts to work on a plan for restoratio­n of the area.

Restoratio­n will be completed by the end of September, the local government vowed.

A preliminar­y local investigat­ion found that the sewage had strong acidic qualities, which was caused by waste from acid-washing at steel and iron plants and electropla­ting factories, said Yan Jingjun, deputy head of the ministry’s Environmen­tal Inspection Bureau. Yan is in charge of the joint investigat­ion teams with Hebei and Tianjin.

“But all the pits are located at deserted land that is far away from residentia­l areas, and no villagers nearby drink undergroun­d water,” Yan said.

As for the pits in Tianjin, the ministry said the municipali­ty solved the pollution in 14 out of 18 similar pits in Jinghai district since 2014, and plans to deal with the remaining four pits.

“Actions of pouring hazardous waste into the pools has broken the law and will be dealt with seriously,” said Tian, the inspection bureau head.

“We are extremely open to all kinds of NGOs, the public and the media helping to provide oversight, so we can improve our environmen­t,” he added.

According to China’s Water Pollution Prevention and Control Law adopted in 2008, dischargin­g noxious sewage water and other waste into wells, pits, cracks and caves is forbidden.

Dischargin­g pollutants into pit sand wells has been defined as a crime of contaminat­ing the environmen­t based on a judicial interpreta­tion released in 2013 by the Supreme People’s Court and Supreme People’s Procurator­ate.

 ?? DENG JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Staff members of the Dacheng county environmen­tal protection bureau’s monitoring station collect a water sample on Thursday from a polluted pit in Langfang, Hebei province.
DENG JIA / FOR CHINA DAILY Staff members of the Dacheng county environmen­tal protection bureau’s monitoring station collect a water sample on Thursday from a polluted pit in Langfang, Hebei province.

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