The story appears on

Page A1

November 30, 2015

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Nation

Pollution targets met 6 months early

CHINA has achieved the pollution reduction targets for major pollutants outlined in its 12th Five-Year Plan, six months ahead of schedule, Environment Minister Chen Jining said yesterday.

But a substantial improvement will only be possible if pollution is reduced by a further 30 to 50 percent, he said.

Chen said that by 2014, discharge of sulfur dioxide and chemical oxygen demand, a measure of organic pollutants in water, had dropped by 12.9 and 10.1 percent from 2010 levels. Emissions of ammonia nitrogen and nitrogen oxide had also declined by 9.8 and 8.6 percent.

Discharges of the four major pollutants continued to drop in the first half of this year, Chen said.

In the 12th Five-Year Plan (2010-2015), China vowed to cut COD and sulfur dioxide emissions by 8 percent and ammonia nitrogen and nitrogen oxide emissions by 10 percent compared with 2010 levels.

Chen also noted that the surface area affected by acid rain in China had shrunk to 1990s levels, while water quality had improved significantly.

China has phased out some 250,000 tons of ozone-depleting substances during the same period, he said. This is more than half of the total amount phased out by all developing countries.

“Not only are we working to fix our domestic environmental problems, we have made considerable contributions to addressing international challenges, too,” Chen said.

However, he said some 20 million tons of major pollutants are still discharged annually in China, and the figure had to be reduced by another 30 to 50 percent.

One year after the world’s second-largest economy “declared war” on pollution, following decades of growth at the expense of the environment, China’s citizens are still concerned by air quality, particularly in major industrial cities.

Chen said China was committed to further reducing COD, sulfur dioxide, ammonia nitrogen and nitrogen oxide in the next five years, and will impose obligatory reduction targets for volatile organic compounds.




 

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