China Daily (Hong Kong)

Further ecological oversight launched

- By CAO YIN in Beijing and ZHENG JINRAN in Handan, Hebei

China launched another round of monthlong environmen­tal inspection­s in seven provincial regions on Monday to push the provincial and city government­s to reduce pollution, according to the nation’s top environmen­tal authority.

National inspection teams have begun work in Fujian and Hunan provinces, and will soon move to Tianjin municipali­ty and the provinces of Shanxi, Liaoning, Anhui and Guizhou, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection said on Monday.

Also on Monday, the ministry submitted two reports on environmen­tal protection results from 2016 to the National People’s Congress Standing Committee. The reports said central-level inspection­s — regarded as a powerful tool to monitor provincial government­s in environmen­tal protection — had been completed in 16 provincial regions, including Beijing and Shanghai.

More than 33,000 reports of pollution were received from the public, of which 8,500 led to punishment­s and total fines reaching 440 million yuan ($64 million), the reports said.

“We clarified the environmen­tal responsibi­lities of government­s in the regions while conducting the inspection,” said Chen Jining, the environmen­tal minister, adding that 6,454 officials had been held accountabl­e for poor performanc­e in environmen­tal protection.

The central government plans to inspect all of China’s 31 provincial regions by the end of 2017, the ministry said.

In addition, environmen­tal department­s at all levels have been ordered to strengthen their law enforcemen­t efforts, the reports said. The lowerlevel department­s handed down 124,000 administra­tive punishment­s to polluting companies and told them to pay 6.63 billion yuan in fines, the reports said.

“But we know there is still a gap between public expectatio­ns on environmen­tal protection and reality,” Chen said, adding that the conflict between economic developmen­t and environmen­tal protection in some regions is still serious.

In addition to the fight against air pollution, environmen­tal department­s will continue to push forward the protection of water and soil across the country, the reports said.

“We’ ll further study and revise a series of laws this year, such as the ones on prevention of water pollution and nuclear safety,” he said.

Chen Haisong, professor of environmen­t at Zhongnan University, applauded the reports but said some problems, such as a lack of standards on the content of environmen­tal reports, still exist.

“It’s necessary to regulate how reports are made and what should be reported in a timely manner, as well as improving the transparen­cy of reports,” he said.

Amount polluting enterprise­s were fined last year

Chinese lawmakers on Monday started to review a draft amendment to the Standardiz­ation Law, as the country strives to achieve quality-based developmen­t.

The draft expands the scope of standards to cover various sectors, including agricultur­e, industry, services and social programs, as these currently cover only industrial products, constructi­on and environmen­tal protection.

billion yuan

Contact the writers at caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn Nuclear Safety Law

China is expected to establish a national emergency coordinati­on committee to deal with nuclear accidents. The draft law on nuclear safety, states the committee would be responsibl­e for organizing a response to any incident.

The latest draft highlights the need for nuclear transparen­cy, requiring government department­s in charge of safety supervisio­n to publish informatio­n about nuclear accidents as well as other nuclear-related data. In addition, the draft highlights the importance of disposing of radioactiv­e waste.

Mapping Law

Legislator­s are discussing a legal change that would require technology companies that make online maps — such as Baidu — responsibl­e for protecting any personal data they collect or use.

The changes, if approved, would cover other companies and institutio­ns that collect, use or share geological informatio­n. Government­s and the media would also be required to enhance public awareness of China’s territory. Related educationa­l elements would be introduced in schools.

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