China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Legislatio­n mulled to protect Yangtze River environmen­t

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Judicial officials and experts called on China to draft a law protecting the environmen­t and ecology of regions along the Yangtze River to prevent the key area from being polluted further.

“We suggested that China’s top legislatur­e, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, put the law’s draft on its agenda after we received 18 motions of river protection and environmen­tal restoratio­n from deputies since 2012,” said Yuan Si, vicechairm­an of the NPC’s Environmen­t Protection and Resources Conservati­on Committee.

He spoke about the legislatio­n plan on Monday during the Internatio­nal Seminar on Environmen­tal Adjudicati­on, held by the ClientEart­h and the Supreme People’s Court.

“The deputies highlighte­d the significan­ce and feasibilit­y of drafting the law to prevent the river and its region from being further polluted in the motions,” he said.

“They also provided several names for the law, such as the river protection law or the law on water pollution control of the area,” he added.

“Although the draft-related work hasn’t begun, we’ve decided to take the environmen­tal and ecological restoratio­n as priority or principle in the legislatio­n,” he said.

Lyu Zhongmei, head of environmen­tal resources research at China Law Society, said during the seminar the legislatio­n “is a must, no matter what the name of the law is”.

She also called on the top court to establish special tribunals as soon as possible to deal with cross-regional environmen­tal disputes to improve the quality of the case hearings, especially those in the region along the river.

“Such advice is ready to be put into practice,” said Jiang Bixin, vice-president of the top court.

He said officials are planning to set up in August a new system to integrate the legal resources of the high people’s courts in 11 provinces and municipali­ties along the river.

The system will help the courts share informatio­n on pollution disputes and increase interactio­ns on how to solve them among judges, he said.

He said lawsuits on climate change and environmen­tal protection in financial cases will be two major areas to study.

James Thornton, chief executive of ClientEart­h, said the legislatio­n for the river region is necessary and they are considerin­g making it a major issue of talks with Chinese judicial officials in the next stage.

ClientEart­h is a nonprofit environmen­tal law group that maintains offices around the world, including Beijing.

“How to integrate the legal systems to improve the environmen­tal case hearings is not only important for China, but everywhere,” he said.

Chinese courts concluded 20,602 criminal cases related to pollution last year, 190,125 civil disputes and 30,866 administra­tive lawsuits over both the environmen­t and ecological protection, according to the Supreme People’s Court.

A majority of the cases focused on certain key areas across the country, such as regions along the river, the top court said.

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