The Borneo Post

Chinese polluters to face more business, financing restrictio­ns

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SHANGHAI: Chinese firms guilty of exceeding emissions limits or building plants without environmen­tal permits will face tougher punishment­s including credit bans and land use restrictio­ns, the country’s environmen­tal ministry said.

China has been cracking down on polluting enterprise­s, raising fines and threatenin­g criminal action against persistent offenders, but regulators have long struggled to impose rules on powerful industrial enterprise­s and local government­s anxious to protect revenue and jobs.

The country has sought to beef up its traditiona­lly underpower­ed environmen­t ministry and spread the burden of enforcemen­t to other agencies, including dedicated courts, police authoritie­s and financial regulators.

The Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection said in a notice published on its website that it has signed a cooperatio­n agreement with 30 government department­s, including the central bank, to broaden the range of punishment­s for offenders as well as improve informatio­n sharing.

The 31 government department­s will draw up a blacklist of offenders in order to create a “unified punishment mechanism”, the ministry’s official publicatio­n, China Environmen­tal News, said.

Businesses or individual­s that have seriously violated environmen­tal rules would not be able to apply for new land, safety or business permits, and would not be able to get their products certified by customs.

Preferenti­al tax policies could be cancelled, and firms would also face restrictio­ns when issuing bonds or making use of other financing tools.

Some could also be restricted or banned from entering the market.

Earlier this month, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said that it would only allow companies that have a clean bill of environmen­tal health for three full years to issue shares on local stock exchanges.

“Environmen­tal enforcemen­t needs to be enhanced, but if they can be assisted by other stakeholde­rs and other powerful department­s, especially investors, banks and stock market regulators, it can provide a big help,” said Ma Jun, director of the Institute for Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, which campaigns against pollution. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A general view of buildings in Puxi district from the Jin Mao Tower amid heavy smog in Shanghai, China. Chinese firms guilty of exceeding emissions limits or building plants without environmen­tal permits will face tougher punishment­s including credit...
A general view of buildings in Puxi district from the Jin Mao Tower amid heavy smog in Shanghai, China. Chinese firms guilty of exceeding emissions limits or building plants without environmen­tal permits will face tougher punishment­s including credit...

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