China Daily

High-carbon projects in inspectors’ sights

Five regions criticized for failing to rein in energy consumptio­n and emissions

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top environmen­tal watchdog has made high-carbon projects a major target of its central environmen­tal inspection, according to reports on inspection tours to five provincial-level regions.

The word lianggao, which means high energy consumptio­n and high emissions, shows up in all five regional reports, which were unveiled over the weekend by the Office of Inspection at the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

The report for Jiangxi province, for example, asked it to “make accelerate­d efforts to optimize industrial structures and energy mix to curb haphazard developmen­t of lianggao projects”.

“With low awareness of high-quality developmen­t in some department­s, some areas fail to effectivel­y contain lianggao projects,” it said.

Launched in 2016, the central environmen­tal inspection teams are usually led by retired ministryle­vel officials. The inspectors report to a central leading group headed by

Vice-Premier Han Zheng.

The Office of Inspection urged Jiujiang and Shangrao in Jiangxi to pursue a low-carbon approach to developing new projects.

The constructi­on of a production line for raw materials used in cement with a daily capacity of 6,600 metric tons in Jiujiang, for example, was begun without passing energy conservati­on tests, it said.

The local developmen­t and reform commission failed in its supervisor­y responsibi­lity by not stopping the project. Now partly completed, the production line has gone into operation.

Inspectors also found a “strong impulse” to launch lianggao projects in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

“Due to the hazy understand­ing of some officials about high-quality developmen­t, the cities of Beihai and Fangchengg­ang in Guangxi raced to introduce a steel project, ignoring current industrial structures and planning,” the office said.

It said some areas in the Guangxi cities of Baise, Liuzhou and Laibin had subsidized and supported lianggao projects for an extended period of time.

Baise, for example, still planned to add new aluminum oxide projects, despite energy consumptio­n and carbon emissions per unit of GDP in the city soaring, instead of being brought down as required during the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) period.

Henan province was urged to speed up the phasing out of coking capacity as the province optimizes an industrial structure that in some areas is still dominated by smokestack industries.

With 4.8 million tons of new annual coking capacity planned last year, total coking capacity either in operation or under constructi­on in Anyang, Henan, reached 10.2 million tons a year, far beyond the needs of the local steel sector, inspectors said.

The ministry said inspectors issued 17,700 environmen­tal violation notices to local authoritie­s for further processing after they completed their one-month inspection in the five regions early this month.

More than 2,400 companies have been punished for violations and total fines stand at almost 187.7 million yuan ($29 million), it said, adding that over 1,000 officials have been held accountabl­e.

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