China Daily (Hong Kong)

Policies boost management of ecology

Documents passed by fourth plenum strengthen assessment, inspection

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

A recently approved Party document includes urgently needed policies to promote China’s ecological progress, and the assessment and inspection mechanism in it will help ensure their effective implementa­tion, experts said.

The Fourth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, held from Oct 28 to 31, approved decisions on upholding and improving socialism with Chinese characteri­stics and advancing modernizat­ion of China’s system and capacity for governance.

The document also deals with further upgrading the system for developing an ecological civilizati­on and promoting the harmonious coexistenc­e between humans and nature, exercising the strictest possible environmen­t-related restraints and strengthen­ing the related accountabi­lity system.

Calling the building of an ecological civilizati­on “a strategy with lasting importance for sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Chinese nation in the millennium to come”, the document emphasized practicing the maxim of “lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets” and remaining committed to the basic State policy of conserving resources and protecting the environmen­t.

Vowing to implement the strictest possible systems for environmen­tal protection, fully establish a mechanism to promote highly efficient utilizatio­n of resources, improve institutio­ns for ecological restoratio­n and conservati­on and strengthen the accountabi­lity system, the document listed policies that need to be quickly rolled out or upgraded.

One is to speed up establishm­ent of a national mechanism to coordinate the planning and utilizatio­n of the country’s land by mapping out areas for protection, farmland and urban boundaries.

Li Ganjie, ecology and environmen­t minister, said the decision defines the direction for ecological progress. The decision “is more explicit about systems that we most need to insist on and implement and those to establish and improve ecological progress and ecological and environmen­tal protection. It provides the direction and fundamenta­l principles to speed up improving the institutio­nal system for ecological civilizati­on, supported by modernizat­ion of institutio­ns and capabiliti­es for ecological and environmen­tal governance,” Li said.

The document also includes a series of measures mainly targeting local government­s and their leading officials.

In addition to an assessment system to evaluate local government­s’ performanc­e in promoting ecological civilizati­on, the document promises a mechanism for auditing natural resources for leading officials who are being transferre­d or leaving office, a lifelong accountabi­lity system for environmen­tal damage and carrying out central government ecology and environmen­t inspection­s.

Chang Jiwen, deputy director of the Institute for Resources and Environmen­t at the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, said these measures are key for effective implementa­tion of systems included in the document.

“These systems are good. They still need effective implementa­tion, however, to make them play their role, or they will become like decoration­s hung on the wall. This makes the conduct of central ecological and environmen­tal inspection­s and the assessment important,” Chang said.

He said it’s also important to address the inadequaci­es of many local government­s in coordinati­ng economic developmen­t and ecological protection, which has hindered the country’s ecological progress, to ensure effective implementa­tion.

Li said the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t will make efforts to enlarge public participat­ion, enhance legislatio­n and resort to financial instrument­s to smooth implementa­tion of policies included in the document.

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