China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Water monitoring results were falsified, inspectors discover

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The country’s top environmen­tal authority has dispatched an inspection team to Zhuzhou, Hunan province, to look into suspected fake data at an automatic water monitoring station.

According to the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, the monitoring sensors at the station had been placed in bottles of drinking water rather in the Lujiang River, which the sensors were supposed to monitor.

“Based on what we’ve seen on the monitoring site, we have reason to suspect that the station was falsifying data,” inspector Zhou Changhai was quoted as saying by China Central Television.

False readings were found first by a team sent by the State Council as part of a broad national inspection campaign. Even when the detectors did find abnormal water quality, the station failed to collect samples and take other appropriat­e measures, the inspectors said.

“We will seriously punish the violations,” the ministry said in a statement.

The ministry said it attaches great importance to the monitoring and reiterated its “zero tolerance” stance on data falsificat­ion.

“Once found, every case related to data falsificat­ion will be investigat­ed, punished and made public. No matter who is involved, the investigat­ion will be in-depth and thorough, with no tolerance,” the ministry said.

In addition to administra­tive punishment­s, those who break the law will be transferre­d to judicial bodies to be prosecuted under criminal statutes, it said.

The case came to light as China is building a nationwide system to monitor surface water.

Previously, surface water monitoring was managed by local authoritie­s. The former ministry of environmen­tal protection, whose duties are now part of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, began to withdraw administra­tive authority for monitoring from local government­s in 2017. One of the purposes of the reform is to prevent “improper conduct of local government­s that interrupts the monitoring”.

Currently, water quality monitoring is carried out at 2,050 sites across the country. There are plans to have an automatic monitoring station at most of those sites to provide timely updates on the internet.

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