The Star Malaysia - Star2

Pollution tax in China

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THE smog-prone northern Chinese province of Hebei has drawn up plans to launch a comprehens­ive environmen­tal protection tax starting in the new year that will give more incentives for local polluters to clean up, authoritie­s there said recently.

China’s legislatur­e approved a new environmen­tal tax law late last year that gave regions the power to set their own rates. Several regions have already drawn up schemes and, in January, will start charging firms according to the amount of air, water and even noise pollution they produce.

But Hebei, a major source of hazardous and politicall­y embarrassi­ng emissions drifting across China’s capital Beijing, is under heavy pressure to clean up and will levy higher rates of tax than other regions.

According to draft regulation­s now being discussed by local lawmakers, firms in the cities of Shijiazhua­ng, Baoding, Langfang and Dingzhou will be charged as much as 6 yuan (RM3.70) for each unit of air pollution and 7 yuan (RM4.30) for each unit of water pollution they produce, the local government said.

The highest permissabl­e rate stand sat 12 yuan and 14 yuan (RM7.40 and RM8.60) respective­ly, according to the law passed last year.

Cities and counties directly bordering Beijing will be forced to pay even higher rates, with major air pollutants like sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides charged at 9.6 yuan (RM5.90) per unit.

Major water pollutants like ammonium nitrate will be levied at 11.2 yuan (RM6.90) per unit.

Units are calculated based on coefficien­ts that assign weights to different pollution sources.

A single unit is the equivalent of 16.7kg of carbon dioxide or 0.95kg of sulphur dioxide.

Neighbouri­ng Shanxi province, China’s biggest coal producing region, also said this week that it would introduce a environmen­tal protection tax starting from Jan 1, 2018.

The province said it expected the new tax to raise 1.9 billion (RM1.17bil) yuan next year, with the figure likely to decline steadily as firms gradually cut their emissions. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Smoke rises from chimneys of a steel plant in Hebei province, China. — Reuters
Smoke rises from chimneys of a steel plant in Hebei province, China. — Reuters

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