Beijing Review

Difficult Environmen­tal Law Enforcemen­t

Guangming Daily April 18

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Inspectors dispatched by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection were locked up at a boiler factory in Jinan, Shandong Province, for more than one hour on April 16.

The plant, owned by Shandong Lujie Green Technology Co., has a coal-fired boiler that should have been phased out, and no equipment had been installed to reduce dust and other discharges.

The inspection was part of the largest ever national environmen­tal protection effort to date, which involves 5,600 inspectors carrying out a yearlong inspection of 28 major cities, including Beijing and Tianjin, in a bid to reduce air pollution.

The incident neverthele­ss underlines the lack of legal awareness among some business people as well as inadequate populariza­tion of environmen­tal protection statutes.

Since the beginning of this year, top officials at the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection have led multiple inspection teams to conduct inspection­s in enterprise­s without advance notificati­on. The strict and solid work style has exerted high pressure on polluters. However, the recent resurgence of environmen­tal protection violations detected by the inspection teams indicates that local environmen­tal protection authoritie­s have not taken real action to tighten law enforcemen­t.

A long-term mechanism should be put in place to oblige local government­s to address environmen­tal problems.

Also, local government officials should alter their mindset by ceasing to regard GDP as the sole criterion for assessing their performanc­e and give more priority to environmen­tal protection.

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