China Daily

Vehicle testing centers face tests

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing’s vehicle testing centers have been warned that they could lose their licenses if they fail a new annual inspection, part of an improved supervisor­y system to be rolled out on Thursday.

Three city department­s, including the Environmen­tal Protection Bureau, issued regulation­s earlier this month to increase oversight of the centers and remove more polluting cars from roads to help improve air quality.

Inspection­s will now be carried out annually at 35 centers in Beijing, with each center receiving a score based on the number of rule violations it discovers. The best score is zero, while the worst allowable is 12.

“We will not let vehicles that exceed emissions standards to go on the road,” Ma Li, director of meteorolog­y for the Beijing Administra­tion of Quality and Technology Supervisio­n, said on Monday. “The new grading system gives clear direction to the testing centers about the major issues.”

The regulation says any center that falsifies data will receive a score of 12 points, which will lead directly to the suspension of its business license.

The testing centers will also be scrutinize­d for how stringent and consistent they are in checking vehicles for environmen­tal compliance, among other areas of concern.

“The supervisio­n and inspection institutio­ns will need to conduct self-inspection and improvemen­t for recorded points,” Ma said. “During one period, an institutio­n that accumulate­s up to 12 points also needs to do a selfinspec­tion.”

In 2017, the capital had made significan­t progress in improving its air quality by reducing major airborne pollutants and achieving national air quality goals.

Last year, Beijing had 226 days with excellent or good air quality (an air quality index reading of 100 or lower) 50 days more than in 2013, according to the environmen­tal protection bureau.

“Environmen­tal inspection is an important way to make sure vehicles in Beijing meet emissions standards to reduce the city’s air pollution,” said Lian Aiping, deputy director of the motor vehicle emission management department at the bureau.

“The regulation is also to make certain that the emissions of vehicles in daily life maintain factory standards.”

The local government also curbed car emissions to reduce pollution, and implemente­d a new license plate lottery policy at the end of last year to reduce the number of new plates available to car buyers.

The first vehicle plate lottery result in 2018 that was released on Monday showed the winning rate was only 0.05 percent — a record low that demonstrat­es the difficulty of owning and operating a vehicle in Beijing.

The quota for vehicles using new energy in 2018 is 54,000, with about 150,000 applicants awaiting their notificati­ons.

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