China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Top legislatur­e urges greater effort to fight rural pollution

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

The top legislatur­e has urged intensifie­d efforts to fight pollution in rural areas to ensure food safety after a fourmonth inspection revealed tough challenges including soil pollution.

Although it is illegal to discharge sewage, garbage, gas or other harmful substances at the places of origin of agricultur­al products, government­s in many places have not strictly observed the law, according to a report released on Wednesday by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress.

The report, based on a national inspection of the enforcemen­t of the Law on Agricultur­al Product Quality and Safety conducted between May and September, said 2.9 percent of China’s cultivated land has serious or medium pollution, and the situation is getting worse in some areas.

Specific informatio­n on Chinese farmland pollution, including the total area and distributi­on, is still not available, impairing supervisio­n and restoratio­n efforts, Ji Bingxuan, vice-chairman of the NPC Standing Committee, said on Wednesday while making the report to the committee.

The inspection team suggested a national survey on soil pollution be completed by the end of the year to gain a detailed view of the size and distributi­on of polluted cultivated land and the impact of pollution on the quality of agricultur­al products, he said.

Also, strict measures will be adopted to control the use of heavily polluted cultivated land. No edible agricultur­al products should be grown on it, he said.

Intensifie­d efforts will be made to punish enterprise­s that illegally discharge sewage containing heavy metal to stop it from flowing into farmland, he said. In some regions, especially where heavy metal mines are located, farmland is seriously polluted, which has caused food safety problems and aroused public complaints in recent years, Ji said.

In November, a media report said rice growing in some farmland in Gangkoujie township in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province, was found to contain cadmium at more than eight times the national standard, which caused a panic among locals.

Investigat­ions by local authoritie­s later found sewage discharged by a local mine caused pollution of nearby farmland. Also, sewage treatment capacity in some cities had fallen behind demand, the report noted.

Yu Fawen, an agricultur­al researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said environmen­tal pollution is very serious in many rural areas of China, with treatment of sewage and solid waste at a significan­tly lower level than in urban areas, and more funding from the government is needed.

“A means of improving and maintainin­g the environmen­t in rural areas should be establishe­d, so that different parties, including farmers, can participat­e in environmen­tal protection,” he added.

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