China Daily

New round of pollution inspection­s begins

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

The country’s top environmen­tal watchdog will dispatch about 18,000 law enforcemen­t officers to conduct air pollution control inspection­s in three key areas starting on Monday.

Last year, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection — which has since been incorporat­ed into the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t — sent 5,600 law enforcemen­t officers to 28 major cities in the BeijingTia­njin-Hebei region to inspect air pollution control work.

This year, the inspection, dubbed “Blue Sky Protection Campaign”, will be extended to the Yangtze River Delta and the Fenhe and Weihe plains in Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces, respective­ly. The campaign is scheduled to last until the end of April 2019.

It was launched based on the fact that some areas are still troubled by heavy pollution, despite continued improvemen­t in air quality in key regions, according to the ministry’s environmen­tal superviage­d sion and inspection bureau.

“Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region is still the area with the worst air quality in the country,” the bureau said in a statement. “Hebei, Shanxi, Henan and Shandong provinces and Tianjin saw no more than 60 percent of days last year with fairly good air quality. And the situation in the Fenhe and Weihe river valleys is deteriorat­ing, not improving.”

The bureau said the campaign will have 12 areas of focus, including poorly man- — and polluting — small enterprise­s, industrial boilers, surface mines and transporta­tion reform.

While inspection teams will be dispatched to 28 designated cities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region and 11 cities in the Fenhe and Weihe river valleys regularly, inspection­s in the Yangtze River Delta area will be irregular, the bureau said.

It said all the inspectors in the campaign are from local environmen­tal department­s or ones affiliated with the ministry. The large-scale inspection by a body of the central government will help train law enforcemen­t officers and offer them opportunit­ies to communicat­e with each other to improve their capabiliti­es.

“The Blue Sky Protection Campaign is the most important priority in pollution control work,” said Li Ganjie, minister of ecology and environmen­t, in a video conference held on Friday to launch the inspection.

He also vowed to make four “obvious” achievemen­ts: to further decrease the concentrat­ion of PM2.5 (tiny particles measuring 2.5 microns in diameter or less), to decrease the number of days with heavy air pollution, to improve the air environmen­t and to make the public happier with more blue skies.

In addition to the air pollution control campaign, the ministry will launch at least six more central environmen­tal inspection­s that will cover black, foul-smelling bodies of water in urban areas; the protection of water sources; and Yangtze River protection and restoratio­n.

“The central inspection­s, which target key regions, fields and problems, represent a new long-term mechanism rather than a short-term action,” said Li, adding that the purpose of the inspection­s is to help local government­s identify environmen­tal problems and solve them.

He also asked inspectors to strictly observe the law. The ministry has publicized email and mailing addresses to accept reports from the general public about violations of law and discipline.

The central inspection­s ... represent a new long-term mechanism rather than a short-term action.”

Li Ganjie, minister of ecology and environmen­t

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