China Daily

Data reviews are the system’s backbone

- By ZHENG JINRAN

Zhao Chenying is an inspector for the Beijing Municipal Environmen­tal Monitoring Team. It’s a demanding job, because the companies he deals with cover a wide range of sectors, from restaurant­s to chemical companies to power plants, which requires Zhao to understand technicali­ties in a number of fields.

On July 21, Zhao reviewed the validity of emissions data provided by the Huadian Thermal Power Plant in Beijing, a branch of China Huadian Corp.

He inspected the entire process, starting by collecting and measuring pollutants in the 100meter-high chimney, where he measured the emissions data with portable equipment before comparing the results with those supplied by the company.

Similar crosscheck­s are applied to follow-up processes, including checking data readings from both the host machines and the boxes that upload the data to the municipal platform on pollutant emissions.

“If the two groups show large discrepanc­ies in any of the processes, the company will be required to review and fix the facilities to guarantee data validity,” Zhao said.

The companies have gradually realized the importance of auto-monitoring facilities ... ” Li Bin, inspector with the Beijing Municipal Environmen­tal Monitoring Team

Cross checking is an uncomforta­blejob because most of the facilities installed near pollutantd­ischarging outlets are situated in high, wet or noisy positions, such as the host machine installed near the thermal plant’s steam boiler, where the temperatur­e was around 50 C.

In addition to quarterly reviews of data validity, Zhao and his colleagues are responsibl­e for monthly inspection­s at businesses known to be large emitters, such as Huadian, while other companies are subject to random monitoring.

There are about 500 inspectors for the capital’s downtown and suburban districts, but there are more than 10,000 pollutant-dischargin­gcompanies .“It’ s impossible to inspect them all frequently ,” said Li Bin, Zhang’s colleague.

Beijing’s emissions-monitoring platform, which became operationa­l in 2012, covers 172 major companies with high levels of emissions, supplement­ing the work of field inspectors, Li said.

The platform allows inspectors immediate access to hourly emissions data, he added.

In the past two years, only 12 companies have been exposed as having excessive levels of emissions or failing to install monitoring facilities in accordance with their own schedules.

“The companies have gradually realized the importance of automonito­ring facilities, which provide a good way of proving their performanc­e in reducing pollution,” Li said, adding that strict controls mean companies must become environmen­tally friendly if they want to continue operating in the capital.

In the first months of operation, when an alert was sounded the inspectors had to call companies to discover the reason, but now, companies voluntaril­y notify the inspectors of the causes of abnormal readings and the measures they will take to rectify the problem, Li said.

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