China Daily

China to get tough with environmen­tal data manipulati­on

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top environmen­tal watchdog said on Saturday it will impose tough penalties on people who manipulate or falsify environmen­tal monitoring data, with criminal liability in severe cases.

The Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t has a zerotolera­nce policy for such deceptive practices and will strengthen inspection­s and punishment for violators, said a statement on its website.

The statement came after a court in Jinzhong, Shanxi province, sentenced five people on May 30 — including the former head of environmen­tal protection in Linfen, Shanxi — to prison sentences of six months to two years for tampering with air quality monitoring equipment and falsifying data.

Another 11 people received four- to six-month terms in a house of detention. According to the verdict statement, they had been found guilty of “damaging the computer informatio­n system”.

In March, China National Environmen­tal Monitoring Center notified the ministry of abnormal air quality data from Linfen. The ministry sent an inspection team and found that the monitoring systems at six of the city’s stations had been tampered with.

A police investigat­ion determined that air quality monitors had been tampered with more than 100 times in a oneyear period beginning in April 2017.

In March 2017, Zhang Wenqing, former head of Linfen’s environmen­tal protection bureau, ordered an official to find ways to “beautify” air quality data in the city, which was in the spotlight due to its frequent alarmingly high concentrat­ions of sulfur dioxide. In January 2017, the level of sulfur dioxide rose above 1,000 micrograms per cubic meter on four occasions.

The perpetrato­rs were promised 3,000 yuan ($460) per month and were given masks, hats, helmets and gloves to hide their identity.

The Linfen government said in a statement on Sunday it was deeply sorry for the lack of supervisio­n on officials and would take stricter actions to ensure the city’s air quality monitoring stations function normally.

Warning signs would be placed around the stations and only staff members would be allowed within 20 meters of the stations, it said.

Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, said the severity of data falsificat­ion in Linfen is rare and shows that the local government still attaches more importance to economic developmen­t and political achievemen­t than environmen­tal protection.

A stricter assessment system puts greater pressure on local environmen­tal protection department­s and sometimes touches the interests of the leaders, which is the main reason for the illegal behavior, Ma said.

It is important to involve the public and research institutes in the supervisio­n so that people can tip off authoritie­s in the event of illegal behavior, he said.

In June 2017, a local court in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, sentenced seven people, including the heads of two environmen­tal protection bureaus in districts of Xi’an, to jail terms of over one year for falsifying air quality monitoring data.

They were found guilty of interferin­g with the data collection of the air quality monitoring system, plugging the sampling instrument with cotton to lower the pollution data.

Falsifying environmen­tal data to avoid pollution regulation­s has been punished as a criminal offense since January 2017, under judicial interpreta­tions on environmen­tal crimes formed by the Supreme People’s Court and Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, the nation’s top court and prosecutin­g office.

Previously, such offenders usually received administra­tive penalties.

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