China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Pollution violators exposed Environmen­t minister blames lax government efforts for situation

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n@ chinadaily.com.cn

Environmen­tal inspectors conducting strict reviews on air pollution innorthern­cities have exposed serious violations relating to control measures, including insufficie­nt efforts of city government­s, with Shijiazhua­ng, capital of Hebei province, being criticized for its deteriorat­ion of air quality in January.

On Saturday alone, over 140 new violations were exposedbyt­hemorethan­260 inspectors sent by the ministry, which launched monthlong inspection­s on Feb 15 covering the Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei region and the neighborin­g provinces of Henan, Shanxi and Shandong.

The ongoing inspection­s, headed by Minister of Environmen­tal Protection Chen Jining and four vice-ministers, are reviewing the measures taken to reduce air pollution as well as companies’ efforts in air pollution control, and have exposed violations such as the poor implementa­tion of emergency plans against air pollution and excessive dischargin­g of pollutants.

On Saturday, an inspection team led by Zhang Jiliang, deputy head of the environmen­tal bureau in Huaiyin district in Jinan city, Shandong province, found a community in Yuxinzhuan­g village of Beijing’s Changping district to be illegally using coal-fired boilers, violating the municipal government’s regulation­s.

The team reported the case to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection and the district government, which said it would investigat­e the issue and try to find ways to replace the coal-fired boilers.

“Government­s are the major targets in these inspection­s. We are reviewing department­s’ implementa­tion of emergency plans against air pollution and their performanc­e in reducing air pollution,” said Zhang, adding that theyhave also inspected polluting companies.

Chen inspected Shijiazhua­ng on Friday, urging the city to implement stricter measures to cut air pollution.

Shijiazhua­ng has seen a sharp deteriorat­ion in air quality since October, with the average annual concentrat­ion level of PM2.5— hazardous particulat­e matter with a diameter of 2.5 microns or less— growing by 11.2 percent in last year compared with 2015, the ministry said.

In addition, PM2.5 concentrat­ion levels in January surged by 51.5 percent yearon-year.

Chen attributed the worsening situation largely to lax environmen­tal efforts of government­s, especially those at the county and township levels, inefficien­t management, a cluster of highly polluting enterprise­s and poor implementa­tion of response measures to tackle severe pollution.

“The excessive dischargin­g of pollutants from small and scattered plants is a primary source of pollution,” Chen said. “Controllin­g emissions of such pollution companies should be a priority.”

He also urged greater efforts in strengthen­ing supervisio­n of key enterprise­s, pressing ahead with industrial upgrading and improving efficiency of environmen­tal protection.

Year-on-year increase of the average annual concentrat­ion level of PM2.5 in Shijiazhua­ng last year

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