China will make an all-out effort to protect its marine
environment, which is facing very serious pollution threats, said
the country's top environment official Monday.
"China is a country with huge marine resources, and its oceans
and coastal regions are crucial parts of the country's economy,"
said Zhou Shengxian, director of the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA).
"But pollution control in and along China's rivers and seas is
still under great pressure," Zhou said, adding that pollution
originating on land had been on the rise for many years.
Zhou made the remarks in Beijing at a five-day GPA workshop, a
global UNEP (the United Nations Environment Programme) program on
action to protect the marine environment.
"Marine environment crises occur regularly in China, and
pollution is still very serious at the mouths of major rivers and
some bays," Zhou said.
Measures to clean up the environment will focus on northeastern
Bohai Bay, the areas around the mouth of the Yangtze River and the
southern section of the Pearl River in Guangdong Province, he said, adding that
sewage discharge would be restricted in these areas.
The three key areas pinpointed by Zhou are close to China's
three major economic engines -- the Bohai industrial belt, the
Shanghai region, and the Pearl River Delta in Guangdong, bordering
Hong Kong.
Zhou took over the SEPA office last December after his
predecessor Xie Zhenhua was sacked over a chemical spill that
seriously polluted the country's northeastern Songhua River.
Cities along the river, including Harbin, capital of
Heilongjiang Province and a city of more than 3 million people,
were forced to temporarily shut down tap water. Russian
environmental officials were then mobilized to join pollution
control efforts as pollutants flowed down the river towards China's
northern neighbor.
(Xinhua News Agency October 17, 2006)
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