China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Census of pollution sources readied

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n@chinadaily.com.cn

China is planning its second national census of pollution sources, aiming to present a clear picture of the situation and analyzing the capacity to control it, the central government said on Wednesday.

The census is meant to provide solid informatio­n to help government­s design better targeted protection projects and policies for the environmen­t, and make their decisions more scientific, the State Council said in a statement.

There will be a special leading committee to guide the second census work, chaired by Vice-Premier Zhang Gaoli, and 15 ministeria­l level department­s will be involved, the statement said.

The second census will start on Dec 31, 2017, and last the whole of 2018. Data analysis and the census report will be done in 2019.

Preparatio­n for the census started Wednesday and will continue until the end of 2017, according to the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection, a major participan­t.

The second census will cover all organizati­ons and individual­s that discharge pollutants, and include detailed data like pollutant types, emission amounts, and operation of equipment to reduce pollution.

All pollution generated in industrial production, agricultur­e, domestic activities and other sources will be covered.

The first Pollution Source Census was conducted in 2007, and the results were released in February 2010. They have “played an important role in environmen­tal protection in recent years”, according to an environmen­tal ministry statement.

In the first census, over 570,000 people participat­ed in the investigat­ion of over 5.92 million targets emitting pollutants, and 1.1 billion sets of data were produced, marking the first clear picture of pollution from the agricultur­al and service industries, according to the data released on the official website of the first census.

Based on the results, China placed pollution sources in agricultur­e on restrictio­n lists, said Wang Yuqing, then office director of the census committee in 2010.

Great changes, however, have taken place in economic and social demographi­c structures over the years, and some pollutants like those generated in rural regions and some mobile sources have become more significan­t, making a new, thorough investigat­ion urgently needed, the ministry said on Wednesday.

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