China Daily

9 accused of dumping toxic waste into Yangtze River

- By CANG WEI in Nanjing cangwei@chinadaily.com.cn Guo Jun contribute­d to this story.

Nine people stood trial in Changshu People’s Court in Jiangsu province on Monday and Tuesday for dumping more than 40,000 metric tons of trash into the Yangtze River, causing serious water pollution and major economic losses.

In December 2016, large amounts of trash, some of it toxic, were found floating in the Taicang section of the river. The trash, which contained medical waste, diapers and household waste, stretched more than 10 kilometers and severely endangered the safety of drinking water drawn from the Yangtze estuary.

Because the dumping sites were upstream from a drinking water reserve, the government of Taicang had to shut down two water intake sites for more than two days.

The illegal dumping caused ecological losses of more than 20 million yuan ($2.9 million). The government­s of Taicang and neighborin­g Shanghai spent more than 6 million yuan to restore the polluted environmen­t, according to the people’s procurator­ate of Changshu.

Prosecutor­s said Tianshun Garbage Clearance Service Co in Haiyan county, Zhejiang province, signed a contract with the local sanitation management center to transport trash to incinerati­on plants in April 2016. Tianshun later subcontrac­ted its disposal to unqualifie­d parties at extremely low prices from August to December.

The subcontrac­tor dumped more than 20,000 tons of garbage directly into the Nantong and Taicang sections of the Yangtze and used another 20,000 tons of household garbage as landfill in Zhejiang and Anhui provinces.

Han Lijia, who prosecuted the company, said the amount of garbage dumped into the Yangtze might be far more than 20,000 tons.

“Third-party environmen­tal protection agencies verified that toxic substances were found in the dumped garbage,” he said. “In a batch of garbage, the amount of volatile toxic substances was more than 80 times the allowable standard. Some even exceeded the standard by 32,200 times.”

“From recent cases we notice that the government has made great efforts in environmen­tal protection,” said Su Dan, a lawyer at the Nanjing office of Yingke Law Firm. “But such garbage dumping still happens from time to time. I think the government should publicize the severe consequenc­es of garbage dumping, strengthen supervisio­n and lower the cost of garbage treatment.”

More than 100,000 tons of garbage were illegally dumped or used as landfill in the Yangtze River estuary and surroundin­g areas in 2016, according to Xinhua News Agency.

The verdict in the recent case will be announced later.

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