China Daily

Officials responsibl­e for environmen­t

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chinadaily.com.cn

Leading Party and government officials at the county, city and provincial levels across China will be held accountabl­e if they fail to protect the local environmen­t. They will be the first to be questioned if antipollut­ion targets are not met, according to China’s latest directive to toughen the fight against pollution.

Jointly issued by the central leadership and the State Council, the directive sets clear and detailed goals in fighting air, water and land pollution. It aims to target the problems that concern the public the most, said Xu Biwen, an official from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t’s Environmen­tal Supervisio­n Office.

China aims to improve the overall environmen­tal quality and ensure a significan­t decrease in pollutant emissions by 2020. By 2035, the country is expected to see its environmen­t fundamenta­lly improved after the industrial structure and people’s lifestyle have become environmen­tally friendly, according to the directive published on Sunday.

By 2020, the percentage of days with moderate and good air quality in cities (prefecture-level and above) needs to reach 80 percent.

Also, the emission of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides must be at least 15 percent lower than the level in 2015, it said. By 2020, the quality of 70 percent of surface water needs to be Grade I to III — the top three levels in China's five-tier water quality grading system. And, more than 90 percent of polluted farmland must be safe to use by then.

Toughening the fight against pollution in such a short period of time can be challengin­g and difficult, so it must be led by the Party, according to the directive.

It noted the importance of adopting strict procedures to assess environmen­tal protection results delivered by local government­s, and an assessment system will be put in place to monitor environmen­tal protection

progress made by provincial Party committees and government­s as well as State organs.

Local government­s are also required to draft annual action plans and report the results to the central government every year. Officials who fail to meet requiremen­ts and contribute to environmen­tal damage will be put on record and subject to a lifelong accountabi­lity system.

China also plans to establish an independen­t supervisio­n system and unify environmen­tal supervisio­n forces to ensure the directive can be fully implemente­d, Xu added.

“We will also enforce and better equip supervisio­n teams at the grassroots level,” he said.

“China is currently in the key period of building an ecological civilizati­on. We feel the pressure because of people’s increasing demand for a better ecological environmen­t. Meanwhile, we have also reached the time that the country is capable of solving key environmen­t protection problems,” Xu said.

China aims to significan­tly reduce PM2.5 concentrat­ions and the number of days with heavy air pollution, improve air quality and make people happy about seeing more blue skies, the directive said.

The country will try to ban importing solid waste for good by the end of 2020 to prevent further land pollution, it said.

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