The Borneo Post

China’s clean skies battle expands, clouding economic outlook

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XUZHOU, CHINA: The frontlines of China’s war on pollution are moving beyond smog-prone Beijing and surroundin­g cities, driven by an effort to improve air and water quality across the country.

Jiangsu, which boasts China’s second-biggest provincial economy, has become the next front in the battle to clean up the environmen­t as Beijing seeks to head off public discontent and accelerate a transition to a greener economy.

In recent months, hundreds of steel, cement, and coal-fired power plants, as well as petrochemi­cal makers, in the major industrial cities of Xuzhou and Lianyungan­g have been shut as local government­s scramble to cut pollution, according to local authoritie­s.

Up to now, anti-pollution measures have targeted provinces further north like Hebei, the steel heartland of China, according to official data.

Xuzhou started to implement its own restrictio­ns on industrial activity after air quality worsened last year.

Unlike the efforts further north, the Jiangsu city’s efforts are not restricted to the winter season when coal-burning – and air pollution – spikes.

The Chinese government has made the campaign against air pollution a national priority and plans to advance the drive across China, expanding its scope to also include water, soil and waste treatment.

It is unclear so far how the campaign will affect China’s economic growth target of 6.5 per cent this year.

The drive has hit industrial output in the north, but strong growth in other parts of the economy – like real estate and services – has helped soften the blow, according to official data.

The Xuzhou restrictio­ns – which the government said would be temporary for an unspecifie­d period – followed a visit by President Xi Jinping in December.

During his visit, according to the official Xinhua news agency, he said “the new concept of green developmen­t should be strictly followed”.

Air quality in Xuzhou was the worst of 74 major Chinese cities in the first five months of this year, according to data from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

The plant shutdowns in Xuzhou have left thousands of workers with only subsistenc­e wages, disrupted businesses along the supply chain and those that rely on worker spending, according to company executives and workers in Xuzhou.

“No one knows exactly when the government will let us reopen,” said Wang Guangrui, vice generalman­ager at Xuzhou Jinhong Steel Co, who estimated his daily losses at about half a million yuan, or about US$ 80,000.

Some steelworke­rs in Xuzhou said they have not been paid for two months.

“There is not much we can do. All factories in town are closed and I won’t be able to find a new job,” said a worker at Jiangsu Xingda Steel Co, one of 18 mills in Xuzhou.

Workers in Xuzhou told Reuters that over 20,000 people were out of work due to the shutdown.

The Xuzhou government did not immediatel­y respond to a faxed request for comment.

In Lianyungan­g, a port city next to Xuzhou, more than 200 chemical companies have been shut since February after an industrial zone was exposed on national TV for illegal sewage disposal.

While the area smelled strongly of chemicals during a visit by Reuters, locals said air and water quality had improved since the closures, though some complained the measures were too extreme.

“I think it’s unfair to close all of the companies in industrial parks only because a few of them violated environmen­tal rules,” said a worker, who asked to remain anonymous, at Rosi Chemical Co.

A nother worker in the industrial park said local authoritie­s had switched off gas supplies to companies and inspection­s to ensure there were no violations were being carried out at night.

Lianyungan­g government did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

In Xuzhou, Zhao Song runs a restaurant with his wife near the front gate of a mill operated by Xusteel Group, the city’s largest steel producer. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A steel mill of Longyuan Steel is seen in Xuzhou, Jiangsu province, China. In recent months, hundreds of steel, cement, and coal-fired power plants, as well as petrochemi­cal makers, in the major industrial cities of Xuzhou and Lianyungan­g have been...
A steel mill of Longyuan Steel is seen in Xuzhou, Jiangsu province, China. In recent months, hundreds of steel, cement, and coal-fired power plants, as well as petrochemi­cal makers, in the major industrial cities of Xuzhou and Lianyungan­g have been...

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