China Daily

Inspection­s expose mass environmen­tal violations

Largest-ever operation to control pollution in China begins

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Inspection­s have exposed violations by companies illegally dischargin­g pollutants and falsifying monitoring data, despite emergency responses to the ongoing air pollution in northern regions, according to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

Severe violations were exposed by the nation’s top environmen­tal officials duringrand­om inspection sin the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region and the neighborin­g provinces of Henan, Shanxi and Shandong, it said.

The ministry announced the launch of a yearlong intensifie­d inspection program in the area’s 28 major cities, starting on Wednesday. Up to 5,600 government workers will be transferre­d from across the nation to support the mission, making the campaign the largest-ever national operation in the field of environmen­tal protection.

On Tuesday, Chen Jining, the minister of environmen­tal protection, visited Sinopec Beijing Yanshan Co, a major petrochemi­cal enterprise in Fangshan district, to inspect levels of discharged pollutants. Chen said that after waiting for 20 minutes, he was unable to obtain records on the repairing of equipment related to emissions monitoring.

It showed the company failed to operate as required in controllin­g and reducing emissions of air pollutants, and it has been required to correct its problems, Chen said.

In addition to poor management, Zhao Yingmin, the vice-minister of environmen­tal protection, exposed severe violations by a new material production company in Anyang, Henan province, which was found to have falsified monitoring data to make sulfur dioxide emission levels show a negative reading.

As of Monday, inspectors in seven cities in northern regions had exposed 200 pollution problems, including excessive emissions, falsified monitoring data and weak implementa­tion of laws by local government­s, according to the ministry.

The ministry said on Wednesday that blue-sky days in the 28 major cities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region and neighborin­g provinces of Henan, Shanxi and Shandong accounted for 60.9 percent of the month, an increase of 20.6 percent year-on-year.

But in the first quarter of this year, only 42.8 percent of days had good air, a decrease of 0.7 percent compared with last year.

The air pollution that blanketed many cities on Monday started to ease on Wednesday, with pollution levels falling from severe to lightly polluted or good, according to data from the China National Environmen­talMonitor­ing Center.

Beijing started to see the air quality improve by 5 pm on Wednesday, but it is forecast to worsen again on Thursday, becoming severe, the secondhigh­est level in the six-tier quality system, according to the monitoring center.

At least 13 cities, including Beijing, had issued orange alerts, the second-highest emergency response level, as of Wednesday, requiring limited use of vehicles and the suspension of production at some industrial sites.

“It’s essential to implement the restrictio­n efforts fully, and tighten the controls on constructi­on sites and dust caused by vehicles ,” Chen said.

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Chen Jining, minister of environmen­tal protection, asks about the measures for dealing with pollutants at Sinopec Beijing Yanshan Co, a major petrochemi­cal enterprise in Beijing, during a surprise inspection on Tuesday.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Chen Jining, minister of environmen­tal protection, asks about the measures for dealing with pollutants at Sinopec Beijing Yanshan Co, a major petrochemi­cal enterprise in Beijing, during a surprise inspection on Tuesday.

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