China Daily

Public asked to report pollution

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

People are being encouraged to report sources of pollution and participat­e in environmen­tal supervisio­n in an orderly manner, authoritie­s said in Beijing on Sunday at the launch of a public environmen­tal protection activity for the upcoming World Environmen­t Day on June 5.

The activity, organized by the China Forum of Environmen­tal Journalist­s, is themed “Beautiful China: I’m a doer”, and aims to stimulate the public to play an active role in environmen­tal protection through various means, including online reporting, said Bai Zhijun, deputy secretary-general of the forum.

People can upload descriptio­ns of pollution sources and details of the time and location through the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t’s WeChat accounts for reporting, such as “12369 Environmen­tal Report” and “Public Participat­ion in Urban Water Environmen­t”, he said.

Li Xiaojing, an associate researcher at the ministry’s environmen­tal emergency and accident investigat­ion center, said that nationwide more than 618,000 tips related to pollution were received from the public last year, an increase of 135 percent over 2016. Tips received through WeChat made up 20 percent of the total.

“Reporting through WeChat is very simple and people are able to check the management status of the cases when they are uploaded,” Li said. “The followers on WeChat have reached over 500,000.”

Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, an NGO, said: “It allows the public to submit tips about pollution scenes they see 24 hours a day, regardless of the hotline staff’s working hours.

“Also, with the help of photos, videos and GPS, the tips received through WeChat will be much more reliable and easier to verify, compared with those received through a hotline or letters.”

Ma said the institute also has an app — Blue Map — which covers airborne pollution, water pollution and heavy-metal pollution discharges across the country. All the informatio­n on the map comes from the websites of environmen­tal protection department­s. It also allows members of the public to report pollution.

Bai said people can also join in the activity by sharing pictures of beautiful scenery, such as the sky, rivers and grasslands, via Sina Weibo and the Blue Map app.

He Jiazhen, deputy director of the ministry’s education and communicat­ion department, said: “This activity will help people take more effective action in environmen­tal affairs and create a social atmosphere advocating ecociviliz­ation.”

It allows the public to submit tips about pollution scenes they see 24 hours a day, regardless of the hotline staff ’s working hours.”

Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs

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