China Daily

Legislator­s call for high-tech curbs on pollution

- By LI LEI

During the annual legislativ­e session that ended on March 11, deputies to the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, called for stepped-up efforts to curb pollution that endangers the health of China’s mother rivers.

Li Haisheng, an NPC deputy and president of the Chinese Research Academy of Environmen­tal Sciences, submitted a suggestion to the legislatur­e, calling for a more techdriven approach to tackling environmen­tal problems facing the Yellow River, the second-longest river in the country and considered a cradle of Chinese civilizati­on.

In an interview with the newspaper Science and Technology Daily, he said technology is key to addressing the weak points in managing the Yellow River.

The environmen­tal scientist called for a drive to develop technologi­es and equipment that can help repair the river’s ecology and tackle existing pollution. Research hubs and observator­ies should also be built to collect relevant data, which in turn can be used to simulate ecological disasters and other risks to improve preparedne­ss, he said.

“In recent years, the ecology of the Yellow River has kept improving,” he said, referring to the better water quality and decreased exposure to industrial waste.

“However, there remains a long way to go,” he said.

The Yellow River flows across several agricultur­al heartlands such as Shaanxi province, and the Ningxia Hui and Inner Mongolia autonomous regions, where agricultur­al runoff has long been a threat to the river’s health. The demand for irrigation water has also strained the river’s flow.

Li advised the regions to reshuffle their agricultur­al structures to curb water demand as well as pollution, and upgrade energy-intensive legacy industries to greener ones.

Another NPC deputy, Wang Qiong, suggested moving the Yangtze finless porpoise, a critically endangered species, back to its native habitat in the Yangtze River as water quality has significan­tly improved in the longest river in China.

The porpoise has faced significan­t threats due to pollution, overfishin­g, habitat destructio­n and boat traffic in the Yangtze River. These factors led to a drastic decline in their population in the 1980s. Authoritie­s have created reserves away from the Yangtze to conserve the species.

Wang, a water quality inspector from Wuhan, Hubei province, told China Environmen­t News that in recent years, the population of the mammal had rebounded and even surpassed the capacity of their adopted habitats.

She said releasing the porpoises back into the Yangtze is crucial. “If they only live within protected areas, their predatory and evasion capabiliti­es will gradually degrade due to the lack of external threats.” Also, relocating the animals helps with their genetic diversity.

Data from the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs showed that China had 1,249 Yangtze finless porpoises in 2022, the first rebound on record.

Citing the example of four Yangtze finless porpoises relocated from a reserve in Hubei province back to the Yangtze in April last year, Wang said surveillan­ce data showed that they are all safe and have successful­ly adapted back to living in the wild.

“That has laid a solid foundation for follow-up release efforts,” she said.

 ?? WANG YANBING / XINHUA ?? Workers clean water lettuce from a section of the Yihe River in Yinan, Shandong province, in October. The plant is considered an invasive species to waterways in China.
WANG YANBING / XINHUA Workers clean water lettuce from a section of the Yihe River in Yinan, Shandong province, in October. The plant is considered an invasive species to waterways in China.

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