The Star Malaysia

Eight regions vow strike on emissions

Govt probe unearths thousands of violations

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SHANGHAI: A total of eight Chinese regions have promised to beef up anti-pollution curbs, vowing fresh cuts in smog, cleaner water and soil and tighter scrutiny over government officials after Beijing-led probes uncovered thousands of violations.

China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t (MEE) said yesterday that the heavily populated industrial provinces of Shandong, Zhejiang and Sichuan were among the regions committing themselves to new measures, as well as Xinjiang and Tibet in the remote north-west of the country.

As part of efforts to crack down on persistent polluters and negligent local administra­tions, Beijing launched a nationwide audit at the end of 2015 into the environmen­tal records of 31 provinces and regions.

Teams led by retired ministers were granted powers to make unannounce­d spot checks at factories and summon local bureaucrat­s to explain their actions.

The inspection­s were completed last year. In a statement published by the MEE, Shandong on China’s eastern coast vowed to “unswerving­ly” implement government policies by tackling polluters and restructur­ing its heavy industrial economy.

The region pledged to resolve all major environmen­tal problems by 2020, according to the statement, cutting concentrat­ions of hazardous airborne particles known as PM2.5 by half to 49mg per cubic metre over the period.

In its commitment­s, Xinjiang, a major oil and gas producing province, promised to set winter production caps on industries like thermal power production, steel, coal and chemicals in a bid to cut 2017 levels of PM2.5 by a quarter by 2020.

The manufactur­ing hub of Zhejiang, near Shanghai, promised to would cut PM2.5 to the Chinese national standard of 35mg, and make 91% of polluted arable land fit for human use by 2020.

Meanwhile the major hydro-power region of Sichuan pledged to improve regulation and shut down plants that encroach on protected land.

By the end of March, more than 2,000 government and state enterprise officials in 15 regions had been held to account as a result of the inspection­s, according to Reuters calculatio­ns based on MEE data. — Reuters

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