China Daily

Officials caught protecting polluters Inspectors fix problems in parts of Fujian, Liaoning and Hunan

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Central environmen­tal inspectors revealed severe pollution problems in Fujian, Liaoning and Hunan provinces, showing that some cities failed to regulate pollution and even protected the polluting companies, the nation’s top environmen­tal authority said on Monday.

This round of high-level inspection­s, launched by the State Council in April, have reviewed how government­s implemente­d the rules in fighting the country’s war on pollution in the three provinces. The performanc­e of some cities was disappoint­ing, leading to deteriorat­ion of the environmen­t and large pollution risks, the inspectors said.

They found some city government­s protected polluting companies by providing falsified documents in the central region of Hunan and northeaste­rn region of Liaoning, statements from the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection showed.

In the core and buffer zones of Haitang Mountain National Natural Reserve, in Fuxin, a city in Liaoning, the management committee illegally approved a company’s dumping of mineral waste, causing severe contaminat­ion. The committee issued a false document to prove the mining and waste were not within the reserve, inspectors said on Monday.

Similar problems were found in Hunan. The Xiangtan city and Xiangxiang county government­s issued false documents in December, saying that one of the leading companies discharged pollutants at a level lower than the national standards based on the online monitoring data. The documents were meant to allow the company to pass an environmen­tal assessment.

In fact, monitoring facilities at the Xiangtan Soda Co did not work, and emissions were excessive for a long time, the ministry said.

Inspectors found some government­s were neither willing nor able to regulate major polluters.

Some nonferrous metal mining and smelting plants, branches of China Minmetals Corp, a Beijing-based corporate group with assets worth 1.6 trillion yuan ($238 billion), should have been punished for dozens of pollution problems since 2013 in Hunan, the central inspectors found. Instead, local environmen­t bureaus did not do that, and the companies refused to correct the problems, the inspectors said.

Inspectors found the leadership of the three provinces did not pay sufficient attention to environmen­tal protection, poorly implementi­ng their efforts, while many companies were found to have excessive and illegal emissions.

After the monthlong inspection, 2,653 officials had been held accountabl­e for their performanc­e as of June, the statements said.

Over 12,800 polluting companies were required to suspend production or shut down, a total of 185 million yuan in fines were collected and 237 people from the companies were detained by the end of June.

Ma Yong, an environmen­tal law researcher at the Supreme People's Court legal center, hailed the thorough inspection and severe punishment that followed, which has changed the behavior of some government officials and companies.

“We have to admit that some government­s did have severe problems, but it was a good opportunit­y for central inspection to correct their behaviors,” Ma said.

He added the central government should establish other ways to implement highlevel inspection­s to keep the pressure on irresponsi­ble officials and companies for longer than just a month.

China has conducted four rounds of inspection­s since January 2015, and all 31 provincial regions will be covered by the end of 2017, officials said.

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