The five-year development program of north China's
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region has included proposals from a
strategic environmental impact assessment (SEIA), the first
development program in the country to do so, a senior environmental
official said in Beijing Wednesday.
"This is the first time that a SEIA has formed part a province's
economic and social development program," said Pan Yue, deputy
director of the State Environmental Protection Administration
(SEPA).
"The practice will pave the way for the country to combat
environmental degradation at the source," he said.
The environmental assessment attempts to predict and assess the
environmental impact of economic policies and programs before they
are implemented.
China is facing severe environmental degradation, which many
blame on the lack of environmental assessments during the drafting
of development programs.
Inner Mongolia has suffered environmental deterioration in
recent years due to over-zealous industrial development, intensive
farming and over-grazing of the grassland.
Pan said Inner Mongolia's new five-year development program had
adopted most of the proposals put forward in the SEIA report which
was prepared by the SEPA and regional environment departments.
The proposals try to balance environmental protection with
economic growth by establishing five major ecological regions and
cutting coal production to 400 million tons from 500 million
tons.
Inner Mongolia, which accounts for one-eighth of China's land
mass, is rich in mineral resources and is an ecological sensitive
area. It acts as a barrier preventing sand storms from reaching
Beijing and other parts of China.
(Xinhua News Agency June 15, 2006)
|