China Daily

Bohai Sea, swine fever discussed

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Several ministry-level department­s, including those for ecology and environmen­t, education, and agricultur­e and rural affairs, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

Maritime pollution tackled

The environmen­tal watchdog said on Friday that it will adopt a variety of measures to fight against pollution and protect the ecology and environmen­t of the Bohai Sea area.

Ke Chang, a senior official from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, said the campaign against pollution will be conducted on four fronts; namely, addressing pollution sources on land, curbing pollution from maritime activities, restoring the maritime ecological environmen­t and preventing environmen­tal risks.

The campaign will target rivers and outfalls flowing into the Bohai Sea, factories, pollution from rural residents and agricultur­e, and urban sewage. Pollution from maricultur­e, vessels and ports will also be targeted, he told a news conference.

The government will adopt rigorous rules to control sea reclamatio­n and coastline developmen­t projects. It will carry out environmen­tal risks assessment­s and law enforcemen­t inspection­s to wipe out major risks to the maritime environmen­t.

The government will also establish an early warning and emergency response system against red and green tides.

Swine fever coordinati­on call

The Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs has called for greater coordinati­on between Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province to control and prevent the spread of African swine fever.

Yu Kangzhen, vice-minister of agricultur­e and rural affairs, said at a work conference on Nov 27 that the risks for the spread of the fever cannot be ignored as the country is still faced with a challengin­g situation of disease control.

Authoritie­s from Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei should unify their leadership over disease control and prevention and increase informatio­n connectivi­ty and coordinati­on in measures, he said.

He also called for better emergency responses to improve prevention and joint efforts from the three provincial areas for law enforcemen­t.

The Agricultur­e Ministry said last month that it has confirmed African swine fever on two farms in Beijing, the first cases in the Chinese capital. The disease was detected on two farms in the municipali­ty’s Fangshan district.

Kindergart­en numbers in focus

The Ministry of Education said on Nov 28 that it will increase the percentage of public kindergart­ens among preschool institutio­ns so that more children can enjoy inclusive preschool education services.

Lyu Yugang, an official with the department of elementary education with the ministry, said in a news conference on Nov 28 that authoritie­s will inspect unlicensed kindergart­ens, certify those that are qualified and suspend or close those that fail to meet safety or hygiene standards.

Those found with “excessive profit-seeking behaviors” in establishi­ng or operating kindergart­ens will be strictly curbed, he said.

Public kindergart­ens took up 44.1 percent of the country’s total kindergart­ens in 2017, according to the ministry.

Online system to help IPR fight

An online trademark service system has been launched as part of efforts to better protect intellectu­al property rights, the National Intellectu­al Property Administra­tion announced on Nov 27.

The online system, which is upgraded from the trademark applicatio­n system, will integrate one-stop services including trademark inquiry, applicatio­n, announceme­nts, online payment and registrati­on publicity, according to the administra­tion.

Shen Changyu, head of the administra­tion, said the launch of the online system is an important step to facilitate trademark registrati­on and to build a trademark service system with high efficiency and transparen­cy.

He noted that the registrati­on and review of intellectu­al property rights are key parts of IPR protection, and the authority will continue to improve the mechanism and its services.

Efforts have also been made to fast-track the trademark registrati­on process, and the average trademark review cycle had shortened to less than six months as of November.

The country has seen a growing number of applicatio­ns for trademark in recent years. Trademark applicatio­ns in China reached around 6 million from January to October, up by 36.4 percent year-on-year, according to the authority.

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