China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Air quality issues found in Shaanxi

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n @chinadaily.com.cn

Poor efforts to cut coal use and upgrade the industrial structure in Shaanxi province contribute­d to a worsening in air quality last year in Xi’an and other cities, environmen­tal inspectors from the central government said on Tuesday.

During a monthlong inspection that started on Nov 28, officials identified 1,309 pollution problems in the province, according to Li Jiaxiang, who headed the team of inspectors.

As of the end of February, 222 polluting companies had been shut down and 26 people found responsibl­e for pollution were detained, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection said in a statement.

In addition, 492 government officials from the province were summoned to talk with the inspectors and 938 officials were held accountabl­e for poor performanc­e in pollution controls, the ministry said.

It is the first province in the second round of centrallev­el environmen­tal inspection­s that received the results.

The other six provincial­level regions, including Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing, will receive their results in the coming days.

The teams of central inspectors, headed by ministeria­l-level officials, set out on a pilot monthlong inspection in Hebei province on Jan 4, 2016.

Between then and Dec 30, they have held two rounds of inspection­s covering another 15 provincial-level regions.

“In these 16 provincial regions, over 6,300 government officials were summoned for talks and another 6,400 were held accountabl­e,” Chen Jining, minister of environmen­tal protection, said last month.

The inspectors will visit the remaining 15 provincial-level regions this year, the minister said.

In Shaanxi, inspectors found mass problems like weak government efforts to keep pollutants from being discharged and a deteriorat­ion of the environmen­t.

For example, the Shaanxi Developmen­t and Reform Commission failed to reduce coal consumptio­n. In 2014, the province lowered the coal consumptio­n in large companies by 2.95 million metric tons, while the reduction goal was 10 million tons, according to the ministry’s statement on Tuesday.

In 2015, the reduction goal was missed again. The reform commission was supposed to cut the coal consumptio­n by 3 million tons, but the reduction was only 110,000.

In addition, three coal-fired power plants in Xianyang that were required to reduce coal consumptio­n actually increased it by over 180,000 tons.

The ministry blamed the worsening air quality in Xi’an and Xianyang last year — with both added to the severely polluted list — on weak controls over coal consumptio­n and other poorly implemente­d pollution control policies.

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