The story appears on

Page A3

December 28, 2017

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Provincial officials slammed for environment ‘lies’

CHINA has criticized officials in the eastern province of Shandong for deceiving authorities to evade capacity cuts in the polluting coal, steel, aluminium and chemical sectors, and slammed another province for lying about closing golf courses.

In a statement released late on Tuesday, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said Shandong’s Binzhou City, China’s aluminium smelter hub, used fake certificates and false data to win approval for 2.4 million tons of new aluminium capacity in 2014.

The environmental watchdog also said Rizhao Steel in Shandong continued to run a mill with 5.94 million tons of capacity after it had been due to shut in 2015. The ministry said all the issues with Binzhou and Rizhao had been resolved by the end of October, but did not give details.

The sharply-worded statement came after the central government dispatched inspectors to Shandong, Jilin, Zhejiang, Hainan, Sichuan, Qinghai, Tibet and Xinjiang in August and September. A total of 40,706 incidents of environmental damage were uncovered.

The singling out of companies in a specific province will serve as a warning to officials of the potential consequences of not falling into line with China’s mandated capacity cuts.

Xinhua News Agency said the northeastern province of Jilin had lied about closing golf courses it was supposed to shut as part of a crackdown on illegal golf courses announced in 2011.

The province had continued to tell the central government it had closed the golf courses when in fact it had not, Xinhua reported, citing the inspectors.

The government has targeted golf courses to protect farmland and save water resources, and also because they are seen as popular venues for shady deals by corrupt officials.

President Xi Jinping said in October that fighting pollution was one of China’s key tasks through 2020. China has vowed to reduce air pollution across 28 northern cities this winter.

In Shandong, more than 10,000 companies were fined a total of 100 million yuan (US$15.3 million) by inspectors in August-September, the environment ministry said.

A total of 1,268 officials in the province had been held accountable for cases of environmental damage, the ministry said.

Shandong ranked 18th among 31 provinces and regions in China’s first “green development” index released on Tuesday, which listed regional governments that promote environmentally friendly development.

Local officials in Shandong lack awareness of environmental issues, according to the ministry statement.

Apart from shuttering polluting factories, China also plans to roll out nationwide by 2020 a system that forces polluters to repair damage to the environment or pay compensation.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend