Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Environmen­tal complaints mount in China

- JACK CHANG

BEIJING — People in China who want to take industries to task for fouling their surroundin­gs are rushing to file complaints and lawsuits this year in a test of new legal procedures that toughen environmen­tal penalties and make clear that many public-interest groups have the right to sue.

Environmen­tal watchdogs say people filed hundreds of complaints with local government­s under the new law that took effect in January, taking advantage of requiremen­ts that authoritie­s respond to environmen­tal complaints or risk having the cases be bumped up to higher levels of government. State media reports say at least one complaint resulted in immediate action, when authoritie­s in eastern Shandong province shut down the coal furnace of a rubber factory that had bothered neighbors.

Environmen­tal groups also have filed six lawsuits that have been accepted by Chinese courts, compared with one allowed during the same period last year. The new cases deal with everything from deforestat­ion to illegal dumping by chemical plants, said Zhang Boju, executive director of the nonprofit group Friends of Nature, which wrote two of the lawsuits. With a $48,000 grant from Chinese e-commerce powerhouse Alibaba, Friends of Nature set up a special fund to help other groups prepare their own lawsuits.

In a country where officials often act above the law while willfully ignoring whole swaths of regulation­s, many Chinese fed up with environmen­tal neglect say the new rules appear to be making a difference. Still, experts say, their success will depend on the continued receptiven­ess of the courts and local officials under pressure to curb the country’s notorious pollution problems.

“The law brought predictabi­lity to the process, where before there was no certainty about what we could do,” Zhang said. “We plan to do more cases and we’re helping other environmen­tal groups do that as well.”

Over the past three decades, Chinese leaders have prioritize­d economic developmen­t over environmen­tal protection­s — and watched China’s skies fill with toxic haze while an estimated 55 percent of its groundwate­r became unsafe for human use.

Public worries about China’s pollution woes were recently highlighte­d with the release of an online documentar­y called Under the

Dome that detailed the health and social costs of Chinese environmen­tal degradatio­n. It received hundreds of millions of views in just a few days, before Chinese censors removed it from streaming sites.

Over the past year, Chinese leaders have repeated that they are serious about cleaning up China’s air, water and soil. They’ve acknowledg­ed that the country’s pollution woes are not only a central source of social instabilit­y but, with China the world’s biggest emitter of carbon dioxide, also a linchpin in the global effort to avoid catastroph­ic climate change.

During China’s annual legislativ­e sessions, which end today, China’s new environmen­t minister, Chen Lijing, has said the government is committed to making full use of the changes, and will commit itself to putting into effect environmen­tal protection­s and inspection­s.

“A new law can’t become a paper tiger,” Chen said March 7 in Beijing. “We want to let it become a weapon with steel teeth.”

Among its provisions, the revised law specifies what kind of social organizati­ons can file environmen­tal lawsuits, with requiremen­ts including at least five years of experience in environmen­tal public interest activities and registrati­on with the government. About 700 groups qualify under the law, according to a report by the All-China Environmen­t Federation, a quasi-government­al coalition that filed two lawsuits this year.

The law allows authoritie­s to impose fines for each day violations occur, rather than one-time fines, and requires officials to encourage “self-governing grass-roots organizati­ons,” volunteers and others to help publicize and enforce environmen­tal laws.

The country also has created a special environmen­tal branch of its Supreme People’s Court to hear high-level cases and help oversee a network of lower-level environmen­tal tribunals.

“In the previous law, it was a developmen­t-based approach, and now the purpose is to construct an ecological civilizati­on,” said Ran Ran, an internatio­nal studies assistant professor at Renmin University in Beijing. “It’s a more balanced approach.”

Local groups are hopeful. Friends of Nature said that only one of the four lawsuits it had filed before the changes took effect was accepted over the past five years, compared with the two filed later and accepted in the first two months of this year. Compared with legal systems in the U.S. or Europe, Chinese courts accept fewer lawsuits in general, and plaintiffs are often put off by paying high legal fees.

 ?? AP/NG HAN GUAN ?? Masks are prevalent as people walk on the streets of Beijing on a recent day of high pollution.
AP/NG HAN GUAN Masks are prevalent as people walk on the streets of Beijing on a recent day of high pollution.
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