China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Impact assessment­s put on faster track

Ministry expedites ecological evaluation for major projects to keep economic growth

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Environmen­tal impact assessment­s for 47,800 projects were greenlight­ed across the country in the first half of this year, as the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t intensifie­d its endeavors to help maintain stable macroecono­mic performanc­e, an environmen­tal official said.

Liu Zhiquan, head of environmen­tal impact assessment and emission management at the ministry, also said planned investment in these projects totals over 8.4 trillion yuan ($1.24 trillion), up by 28.9 percent compared with the same period last year.

The increase is the result of a series of measures taken by the ministry to enhance the efficiency in the examinatio­n and approval processes, especially for major projects, he noted at a news conference on Thursday.

In June, the ministry published a notificati­on on better serving environmen­tal impact assessment­s for major projects, urging environmen­tal authoritie­s of different levels to offer support, he continued.

The ministry, for example, made a list of all those major projects, he said. Aside from simplifyin­g the procedures for compiling the assessment documents for them, it also mobilized experts to help with the drafting work.

Liu noted the great importance the ministry has attached to coal production, water conservanc­y, oil and gas pipelines, and railways as key sectors.

“With service support mechanisms establishe­d for environmen­tal impact assessment­s in some key sectors, the ministry opened green channels for projects that meet requiremen­ts on ecological and environmen­tal protection,” he said.

“Assessment documents from such projects are immediatel­y accepted and transferre­d for examinatio­n once they are handed in. On the basis of ensuring ecological and environmen­tal safety, the ministry has accelerate­d the examinatio­n and approval process for them.”

To date, the ministry has held 15 coordinati­on conference­s for these key sectors. In the first half of this year, it approved environmen­tal impact assessment documents for 91 major projects, he said. Among them, 20 are coal mine projects that help address tension between supply and demand for the fuel, increasing the country’s annual coal production capacity by 125 million metric tons.

Liu also highlighte­d efforts the ministry has made to ensure the quality of the assessment’s examinatio­n and approval.

Referring to assessment­s as the first line of defense to safeguard the environmen­tal approach of “lucid waters and lush mountains”, he said, “the work plays an important role in synergizin­g high-quality economic developmen­t and environmen­tal protection”.

In addition to demanding higher efficiency, the ministry has asked local authoritie­s to strictly ensure environmen­tal safety in examining and approving assessment documents, and to ramp up supervisio­n over related projects.

He stressed that locations, distributi­on and scale for all types of projects should follow the law, saying these are bottom lines that cannot be crossed. All projects should take effective measures to ensure that their emissions meet national standards and local requiremen­ts, he said.

Sticking to a people-centered philosophy of developmen­t, environmen­tal authoritie­s should pay special attention to projects with residents nearby, Liu emphasized.

The most rigorous control measures must be included in their environmen­tal impact assessment documents if some projects have the potential to directly affect the public with exhaust gas, noise, wastewater and hazardous waste.

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