China Daily

Coastline oversight to be strengthen­ed

Observatio­n of coastal areas will be taken into account when officials are assessed

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

The government has pledged to strengthen the management and protection of China’ s coast lines, according to the State Oceanic Administra­tion.

The administra­tion has recently published the Coastline Protection and Developmen­t Regulation, the first of its kind, and requested authoritie­s in 11 provincial-level regions that have coastlines to strictly execute guidelines in the regulation­s. The 11 regions include Liaoning, Hebei, Shandong, Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces as well as Shanghai and Tianjin municipali­ties.

The foremost objective of the regulation is to make sure that at least 35 percent of coastlines along the Chinese mainland will remain unexploite­d by the end of 2020. Currently, about 40 percent of such coastlines are unused, according to statistics from the administra­tion.

Changing the landform and environmen­t of protected coast lines is prohibited unless it is for national security reasons, the regulation says, adding existing developmen­t projects on coastlines shall be strictly scrutinize­d and controlled.

Local government­s’ conservati­on of coastlines will be taken into account when their governance performanc­es are assessed, while officials failing to obey the regulation will be held responsibl­e, according to the State Oceanic Administra­tion.

China has about 18,000 kilometers of coastline. More than half of the country’s exploited coastlines are used by the fishery industry while transporta­tion and urban infrastruc­ture occupy about 20 percent of the coastline, said Guan Daoming, director of the China Marine Environmen­tal Monitoring Center.

Shi Qingfeng, deputy head of the State Oceanic Administra­tion, said coastline management concerns the nation’s ecological security and the well-being of residents in coastal regions. Many sections of China’s coastline have been over developed and polluted, he noted.

Shi said his administra­tion will work with local government­s to make annual plans for coastline management and restoratio­n. He added that applicants who want to use coastal areas will face stricter review procedures.

The government will open more well-preserved coastal areas to the public for tourism and leisure, Shi said.

In addition to better protection of coastlines, the government also plans to restore the environmen­t in 85 square kilometers of coastal wetlands and to improve the ecology in 66 bays and 50 islands before the end of 2020, according to Fang Jianmeng, another deputy head of the administra­tion.

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