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China addressing pollution issue
(AFP)
China, the factory of the world, is
being slowly choked by the pollution brought on by its unrelenting economic
transformation and the government is starting to realise it needs to do
something about it, AFP reported.
Environmentalists describe the
situation as extremely serious, but they say a window of opportunity still
exists to reverse a worsening trend.
"The government is not just sitting
idle but it is also clear they are not doing enough to cope with the current
crisis," said Greenpeace China spokesman Szeping Lo.
"There are reasons to be worried.
It's all about whether the central government has the political will and
executive power to implement its policies."
Parts
of the Chinese apparatus acknowledge the problems that exist, although many
provincial and local level governments continue to turn a blind eye to the
environmental costs of development.
According to the State Environmental
Protection Administration (SEPA), acid rain fell more often and on more cities
last year, affecting 298 urban areas -- more than half of all the cities
monitored.
Most of China's large waterways --
including its seven biggest rivers and 25 out of its 27 major lakes -- were
polluted, some seriously, it said.
Urban pollution is another
fast-growing problem, as statistics show only one third of the sewage and about
57 percent of the garbage generated in cities is being treated.
Coal is the worst culprit. It is
used to fire 80 percent of China's power stations which fuel the economic drive,
but such a heavy polluting resource is damaging the environment and harming its
people.
The World Bank estimates 400,000
people in China die each year from air pollution-related illnesses, mainly lung
and heart diseases. It says direct damage costs China an annual 8-12 percent of
its 1.4 trillion dollars GDP.
The capital Beijing is one of the
worst affected cities and is regularly engulfed in a thick gritty haze.
The conditions forced experts last
week to warn the pea-soup smog could cause headaches and dizziness and even
breathing difficulties and asthma attacks -- all this just three years before it
hosts the Olympics.
But after years of blind economic
development, China is gradually waking up to the environmental costs, and is
trying to do something about it as pressure builds from its citizens.
"China's urbanization process is now
at a crucial juncture," admits Yang Weimin, director of the Development and
Planning Department under the National Development and Reform Commission (NPRC),
the country's top policy regulator.
"If the process continues in an
unsustainable manner, it would result in serious consequences," he was cited as
saying recently by Xinhua news agency.
Authorities are currently focusing
efforts on developing clean energy by using wind and solar sources to generate
power.
China's need for clean, non-fossil
fuel based energy is also expected to make it the largest constructor of nuclear
power plants in the coming decades.
Green peace's Szeping applauded the
steps but urged still more.
"Right now we are facing a very
serious situation and the government needs to take this opportunity," he said.
"It needs to invest hugely into the
renewable energy sector. There is still far too much being invested in coal. The
picture now is bad enough, we can't afford to wait another 10 years to realise
this."
China's citizens are also growing
more environmentally aware with an official survey last month of four million
people in 31 provinces and regions showing water and air quality were key
concerns.
An overwhelming 98 percent were in
favour of levying special taxes to help boost environmental protection and
nearly three-quarters said legislation must be tightened to make sure
environment protection laws are obeyed.
The results will be used by the
government in the drafting of its next national five-year plan on environmental
policies. |