China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Illegal berths, sand-mining targeted along Yangtze River

- By CHENG SI chengsi@chinadaily.com.cn

A more vigorous campaign will be conducted to stop illegal sand-mining activities and eliminate squatter berths and docks along the Yangtze River, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

A newly released guideline from the commission’s leading group promoting developmen­t of the Yangtze River Economic Belt includes strengthen­ed scrutiny over protection of the river’s banks to help recover the river’s ecosystem.

Luo Guosan, director of the commission’s fundamenta­l industry department, said new technologi­es such as drones, cloud platforms and big data, will be used to reinforce supervisio­n of ports and docks to prevent illegal activities.

Joint law enforcemen­t actions, Luo said, will also be performed by maritime authoritie­s and the police, while informatio­n will be publicized about the illegally berths.

The commission issued rules in 2015 targeting illegal berths and sand-mining activities along the river, and has pursued the program over the past three years.

Liu Dechun, deputy director of the fundamenta­l industry department, said that great progress had been achieved since the program began. More than 1,300 illegal docks along main stretches of the Yangtze River were dealt with. Of those, 1,254 were built docks and removed and 107 turned into authorized units, Liu said.

Wang Yanghong, director and Party chief of the Port and Shipping Administra­tion Bureau of Hubei province, said, “The thorough regulation program against illegally built docks is unpreceden­ted and the appearance of ports and docks along the Yangtze River has fundamenta­lly changed over the past two years.”

Wang said 1,823 berths had existed along the river in Hubei province, but only 566 remained

Several parks with a combined area totaling 5.6 million square meters were built at the sites of removed docks and berths and have become new popular leisure choices for local residents, he said.

“The regulation will be enhanced with a comprehens­ive system supported both by the government and the market,” he said. after the regulation. Liu Kun in Wuhan contribute­d to this story.

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