China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Expert hails bold environmen­t moves

- By ANGUS MCNEICE angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

President Xi Jinping’s plan to establish an “ecological civilizati­on” is among the best blueprints for green governance, according to James Thornton, a UK-based environmen­tal lawyer and activist.

New data suggests global climate change is increasing at unpreceden­ted rates.

According to a World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on report published on Monday, the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere surged last year at the highest rate in 800,000 years, driven by human activity and drought.

The environmen­t was among the topics addressed at the recently concluded 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

In his keynote speech at the event, Xi mentioned the environmen­t 89 times, while the economy was mentioned 70 times, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

In addition to creating more material and cultural wealth for the population, Xi told delegates that China needs to provide more quality ecological goods to help protect the environmen­t.

Erik Solheim, head of the United Nations environmen­t department, said “global political will and a new sense of urgency” is needed to combat climate change.

The five years since the 18th CPC National Congress have seen great improvemen­ts to environmen­tal policy in China, including the first amendments to the country’s Environmen­tal Protection Law in a quarter of a century.

Thornton, the founder and chief executive of Londonand based environmen­tal advocacy agency ClientEart­h, was among five foreign experts to advise the Chinese government on the new legislatio­n.

“Which Western country is getting together a global panel of experts to analyze its legal system to see what could change to deliver an ecological civilizati­on? Nobody,” Thornton told China Daily.

ClientEart­h has taken successful legal action in the United Kingdom on air pollution, in Poland to prevent the building of new coal-fired power plants.

Thornton said China has taken “profound corrective action” on its environmen­tal policy. The updated law makes it easier for civilians and nongovernm­ental agencies to bring cases against polluting companies, including Stateowned enterprise­s.

“The government is very eager to do the right thing by its own people, and there is no sense of fighting or pushback, and that is unique in my experience,” said Thornton, who is now advising China on the creation of a fund to cover the cost of environmen­tal impact assessment­s in legal cases.

“If a company has been polluting a forest or a wetland, then a judge needs to write an order for the company to clean up their mess,” Thornton said.

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