Six areas criticized for poor performance in rectifying environmental problems
In a rarely seen cautionary move, China's top environmental watchdog
summoned leading officials of six areas on Monday for their poor
performance in rectifying problems in the Yangtze River Basin.
Governments of the six prefecture-level areas failed to fulfill their
supervisory duties, with problems unearthed over two years ago still
evident, the Ministry of Ecology and Environment said.
The government of Shangrao, Jiangxi province, was criticized for its
dereliction of duty in addressing the discharge of polluted water from
refuse landfills, which was exposed in a high-profile central
environmental inspection in 2018.
Staffed by ministry officials, the inspection teams are headed by
minister-level officials. The inspectors report to a central leading
group headed by Vice-Premier Han Zheng, who is also a member of the
Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of
China Central Committee, the country's highest authority.
Inspectors found over two years ago that disposal facilities for
waste water leaking from the Fengshun refuse landfill in Shangrao had
been operating abnormally for a long time, which meant the water it
discharged contained high levels of pollutants, the ministry said in a
news release issued on Monday.
A rectification plan drafted by the Shangrao government vowed to
address the problem by the end of June 2019. But the ministry statement
said, "Investigation found, however, the problem has yet to be
adequately settled."
Environmental hazards at refuse landfills in four counties in Shangrao had also not been addressed, it said.
"Using the excuse that they lacked necessary expertise, officials
with the Shangrao development and reform commission, which headed the
rectification work, acted as if they were going through trivial motions
in supervising the rectification," Xu Bijiu, executive deputy director
of the central environmental inspection office, said in summoning
Shangrao Mayor Chen Yun.
Chen said the city will make determined efforts to completely rectify the problem.
"Those responsible for the protracted rectification will be seriously held accountable," he said.
Authorities in Suining, Sichuan province, were rebuked for cheating
in rectifying the overflow of untreated polluted water from a sewage
treatment plant into the Fujiang River, a branch of the Yangtze, which
was exposed in 2019 in Shehong county, the ministry said.
Urged 12 times to accelerate rectification, Shehong authorities did
nothing. Knowing full well that the overflow was still occurring in the
county, Suining's housing and urban-rural development bureau reported
that it had been stopped.
Also criticized on Monday were the governments of Chizhou, Anhui
province, Xiaogan, Hubei province, Hengyang, Hunan province, and
Nanchuan, Chongqing.
The ministry didn't summon any local governments last year. It
previously resorted to the cautionary move in June 2019 to urge six
cities in Hebei, Henan and Shanxi provinces to enhance air pollution
control efforts.
Xu said it was the first time the ministry had summoned local
governments specifically for concerns related to conservation of the
Yangtze. Asia's longest river, its protection has been given increased
importance by the central authorities.
Governments of the six areas will have to submit their rectification
plans to the ministry and their provincial governments within 20 days.
The plans will also need to be made public, the ministry said.
President Xi Jinping has chaired three symposiums on the Yangtze
River Economic Belt, which consists of 11 provinces and municipalities
and accounts for about half of China's population and GDP.
At the latest symposium, held in Nanjing, Jiangsu's provincial
capital, in November, Xi called for the accelerated establishment of a
mechanism to adequately reward protection and restoration of the
ecosystem and environment, and make those responsible for their
destruction pay a price.
Xu, from the central environmental inspection office, said it wanted
to send a clear signal by summoning the officials that environmental
protection efforts will not be relaxed even though all targets set
during the 13th Five-Year Plan period (2016-20) had been realized, with
some exceeded.