China Daily (Hong Kong)

Environmen­tal compensati­on surges

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Over 2.9 billion yuan ($410 million) in punitive compensati­on for environmen­tal damages has been collected across the country as China endeavors to improve a regulatory system needed for the smooth implementa­tion of a compensati­on mechanism, a senior environmen­tal official said.

The funds, which were collected in 945 cases since the mechanism was launched as a pilot program in 2015, have effectivel­y promoted remediatio­n of a large amount of environmen­tally damaged soil, forest, grassland and water bodies and the clearance of solid waste, Bie Tao, head of law, regulation­s and standards at the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, told a news conference on Tuesday.

The mechanism was fully implemente­d across the country in 2017.

According to the ministry, in one of the cases, a company in Chongqing paid almost 9.5 million yuan for environmen­tal and ecological damages it caused.

The company, the name of which was not disclosed, discharged concrete waste into 14,400 square meters of farmland from 2007 to 2019.

The discharge resulted in water and soil loss and also hardened the farmland’s soil.

In addition to paying compensati­on, which is calculated based on damage assessment, the company also had to clean up the damaged land.

Bie said about 80 percent of the nation’s compensati­on cases occurred in 13 provincial regions, each of which has over 20 cases.

There are, however, no more than 10 cases in some other regions.

This means that some regional government­s have not made adequate efforts to claim compensati­on as required, he noted.

According to Bie, in 2019 central authoritie­s requested that high-profile central ecological and environmen­tal inspectors conduct checks to determine whether major ecological and environmen­tal damages have been properly compensate­d.

“If local government­s don’t claim compensati­on as required, they will be held accountabl­e in the inspection. It’s derelictio­n of duty,” he stressed.

Marked progress has been made in promoting the compensati­on mechanism through legislatio­n and drafts of relevant standards for damage assessment, though more still needs to be done to pave the way for implementa­tion, Bie noted.

The mechanism has been written into the Civil Code, which was passed by the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e, late in May, and laws on soil and solid waste pollution as well as one regarding forests, he said.

Meanwhile, 157 of the 337 cities above prefecture level have drafted plans for the implementa­tion of the compensati­on mechanism.

In total, these cities published over 200 documents to support the implementa­tion, he added.

With eight assessment specificat­ions for different types of environmen­tal damage, however, the country has yet to establish a standard assessment system that is adequate. Currently, China still lacks assessment standards for some highly technical sectors.

“What’s more, many regions are short-handed, lacking people with proper expertise for damage evaluation,” he said.

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