The Star Malaysia

Govt introduces waste permits

Move a vital step in controllin­g pollution from enterprise­s

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BEijinG: Companies and public institutio­ns will soon need to apply for a new government-issued permit before they can discharge pollutant waste, with restrictio­ns placed on how much they can emit.

The move, announced as part of a pilot plan approved by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection last week, is seen as a vital step in efforts to control pollution and improve air, water and soil quality.

According to the plan, which runs to 2020, the permits will be mandatory for industrial enterprise­s, as well as some public institutio­ns, which are financed by the state, have no revenue, and cover sectors such as education, science, culture, health and the media.

Enterprise­s that apply but fail to qualify for a permit will still be monitored by local environmen­tal protection authoritie­s to prevent pollution, the ministry said.

China has witnessed rapid economic developmen­t over the past three decades.

Yet it has come at a price as industrial activity has degraded air, water and soil quality nationwide.

In key areas, such as the BeijingTia­njin-Hebei cluster, smog has become a major headache for residents and local authoritie­s.

The new permit – which sets a ceiling on how much waste an enterprise can discharge into the atmosphere or waterways over a certain period – is part of wider efforts by the central government to build a strict, integrated system that controls pollution nationwide.

“These permits must be issued to all potential polluters, that’s the first step,” said Song Guojun, director of the Environmen­tal Policy and Planning Institute at Renmin University of China.

“Without this permission, enterprise­s cannot accurately report their emissions, as the previous requiremen­ts were ambiguous.”

China first introduced pollutant discharge permits in the late 1980s, but they were not compulsory.

According to the ministry’s data, only about 240,000 enterprise­s in 20 provincial areas ever received these original permits.

A ministry guideline on introducin­g the new unified system was released in January.

The document covered the processes for applicatio­n, examinatio­n, approval and management, and said companies will be required to disclose the volume and location of all discharges as well as the types of pollutants released.

The informatio­n should be presented in a way that is easy for the public to understand, the document added.

This came after the State Council released a plan in November last year to establish a national platform in 2017 to manage data related to these permits. — China Daily/ Asia News Network

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