China Daily (Hong Kong)

Monitoring ramped up on chemicals

Better management to reduce impact of substances on environmen­t, health

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

In a move to beef up the management of emerging pollutants, which have long-lasting environmen­tal impacts and health hazards, China has introduced a dedicated guideline, vowing to ramp up monitoring and step up import and export management.

China, the world’s largest chemical producer, will have screened all chemical substances with high production and consumptio­n for their environmen­tal risks by the end of 2025, according to the document, which was unveiled by the State Council, the country’s Cabinet, on Wednesday.

Regarding toxic and hazardous chemicals, the country aims to see an institutio­nal system and governance mechanism for them establishe­d and gradually improved by that time, it said.

Emerging pollutants, or contaminan­ts of emerging concern, can refer to many kinds of chemicals and compounds such as ingredient­s of medicines, agricultur­al products and household cleaning products.

Despite more research being needed, it has been widely acknowledg­ed that these emerging pollutants are increasing­ly becoming a hazard. With a detrimenta­l effect on aquatic species such as fish, they can accumulate up the food chain, posing a risk to other species when they eat contaminat­ed fish.

With 210,000 chemical-producing entities, China outpaces all other nations in chemical production. Producing over 2,800 varieties of chemicals, the industry’s output value accounted for 13.8 percent of the country’s GDP in 2018, according to the Ministry of Emergency Management in 2020.

The document released on Wednesday includes 19 measures, including the establishm­ent of a special monitoring network.

On the basis of existing monitoring facilities, the country will roll out pilot programs on monitoring emerging pollutants in key regions, industries and industrial parks, it said. A survey and monitoring system for such pollutants will be preliminar­ily establishe­d in less than three years.

A list of key emerging pollutants for risk control will be drafted and updated in a dynamic manner. All those pollutants on the list will be either banned or restricted in production, processing, import and export.

The restrictio­n on the content of such key pollutants will be incorporat­ed into national compulsory standards for toys and students’ supplies, according to the document.

It said that by enhancing environmen­tal impact assessment­s, the introducti­on of projects concerning emerging pollutants will be subject to more stringent restrictio­ns.

The production and consumptio­n of pesticides and antibiotic­s are also among the major concerns identified in the document, which said the assessment of environmen­tal hazards from the two types of products will be intensifie­d.

All highly toxic pesticides that can bioaccumul­ate and have longlastin­g impacts will fall under even more rigid control. The existing ones will be reassessed before the end of 2030.

New antibiotic­s for animal use will be assessed when they are registered, it said. All antibiotic­s will only be available through prescripti­on in drugstores.

According to Wang Jinnan, head of the Chinese Academy of Environmen­tal Planning, about 180,000 metric tons of antibiotic­s are consumed annually in China, roughly half the world’s total.

The country started emerging pollutants management comparativ­ely late. The work is still in its developmen­t stage and has many weak links to address.”

“There are now about 45,000 varieties of chemical substances in China. The number is still rising with almost 1,000 new ones added every year,” he said in an interview late last year, adding that environmen­tal emissions may occur throughout their life cycle from production to disposal.

With potential risks to the environmen­t and health, emerging pollutants have been major hindering factors for continuous improvemen­t in the quality of air, water and soil.

Despite some progress controllin­g emerging pollutants, it’s still urgent to enhance governance, he said.

“The country started emerging pollutants management comparativ­ely late. The work is still in its developmen­t stage and has many weak links to address,” he said.

The country, for example, still lacks long-term mechanisms and systematic planning for the governance of emerging pollutants, he said. A systematic management system that covers hazard identifica­tion, survey and monitoring, environmen­tal risk assessment and control has yet to be establishe­d.

Wang Jinnan, head of the Chinese Academy of Environmen­tal Planning

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