Iran Daily

China’s regions seek support as environmen­tal compliance costs hit

-

China’s cashstrapp­ed regions are lobbying Beijing to loosen its purse strings to help fight pollution, saying they don’t have the funds to meet state policies aimed at fixing the damage done by decades of unrestrict­ed developmen­t.

The cost of environmen­tal compliance was a major theme at this month’s annual session of the country’s National People’s Congress, where thousands of nonbinding recommenda­tions submitted by delegates give an insight into the major preoccupat­ions of legislator­s, Reuters wrote.

Beijing has been at pains to stress it will not ease up in the ‘war on pollution’ launched five years ago by Premier Li Keqiang, even though the economy grew at its slowest rate since 1990 last year.

But with resources tight and controllin­g debt a priority, many parliament­ary delegates called for more spending support from Beijing and a more ‘coordinate­d’ approach to keeping pollution in check and the economy on track.

“We cannot stop or hinder economic developmen­t in order to pursue environmen­tal protection,” said delegate Pei Chunliang from central China’s Henan province, which has struggled to find new sources of growth.

“In some regions the rules of economic developmen­t have not been respected,” Pei warned in a proposal calling for more support for environmen­tally friendly firms.

For regions under pressure to meet smog targets or resolve long-standing environmen­tal problems while trying to meet growth targets, immediate relief is seen as essential.

“There is a big gap between fiscal revenues and expenditur­e,” said Zhang Leiming, mayor of the city of Pingdingsh­an in Henan, blaming the economic slowdown and the city’s dependence on coal.

Zhang said his city had spent hundreds of billions of yuan to tackle problems like land subsidence, but it was ‘far from enough’, and the state needed to establish a giant fund to help resource-dependent cities meet their goals.

Many regions called for state aid to rectify such longstandi­ng pollution problems, with delegates from coal-producing regions like Shanxi lobbying for tax and debt relief.

Other regions are also struggling to implement new directives to prevent agricultur­al pollution and clean up rivers.

“Due to insufficie­nt local financial resources and historical debts, it is difficult to meet the funding requiremen­ts,” said delegate Yu Huiwen, head of the environmen­t bureau in Sichuan province, which is responsibl­e for protecting the upstream area of the Yangtze.

The finance ministry said in its report to parliament this month that it will allocate ¥25 billion ($3.7 billion) to a smog prevention fund this year, a 25-percent increase on 2018, and ¥30 billion to treat water pollution, up 45 percent.

Environmen­t minister Li Ganjie, who acknowledg­ed earlier this year that some regions were struggling with the ‘historical burdens’ of polluting industries, also told a briefing during the parliament­ary session that China would provide more support for local government­s.

The government was “currently studying and preparing to adopt new measures,” he said, but added it wasn’t just about money, but also policies and technical guidance.

“Whatever the difficulti­es, we will help them find a reasonable solution,” he said.

 ??  ?? REUTERS
REUTERS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran