China will spend at least 34 billion yuan (US$4.3 billion) to
phase out persistent organic pollutants (POPs) in 10 years, a
Chinese environmental official said on Wednesday.
"This is only a preliminary calculation, and does not include
the funds needed to treat the places contaminated by POPs," said
Zhuang Guotai, deputy director of the office for Stockholm
Convention Implementation under the State Environmental Protection
Administration.
He said that the funds needed to treat the polluted areas "could
be very huge" and difficult to estimate as there is still
insufficient information about how many areas have been
contaminated and how seriously they have been affected.
China has drafted a plan to phase out the world's most toxic
chemicals as required by the Stockholm Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants, he said.
According to the plan, China will stop the production and use of
chlordane, mirex and DDT used in anti-dirt paint by 2010, and
safely dispose of electric appliances containing POPs by 2015.
By 2015, China will also stop the production and use of POPs in
pesticides.
The plan will be submitted to the State Council for approval in
July, he said.
Under the Stockholm Convention, China will have to submit its
national implementation plan to the convention's secretariat by
November 11.
China signed the Stockholm Convention in May 2001 and it came
into effect in China in November 2004.
Funding to control POPs will come from the central government,
local governments and domestic companies as well as international
organizations and foreign governments.
The Italian government has pledged to provide US$7 million in
aid, the biggest sum pledged by a foreign government so far.
The fifth meeting to discuss China's implementation of the
Stockholm Convention was held on Wednesday, with the attendance of
more than 100 government officials and representatives from China,
European countries, UN organizations and Italia, Germany, Norway,
Japan and Finland.
"The Stockholm Convention can be successful only if it succeeds
in China as the country is very influential in combating POPs,"
said Zoltan Csizer, a senior adviser of the UN Industrial
Development Organization, at the meeting.
Of all the pollutants released into the environment every year
by human activity, POPs are among the most dangerous. They are
linked with cancer, allergies and hypersensitivity, and damage the
central and peripheral nervous systems, which also cause
reproductive disorders and disruption of the immune system.
According to the United Nations Environment Program, every
person in the world carries traces of POPs in his or her body. POPs
are highly stable compounds that can last for years or decades
before breaking down.
(Xinhua News Agency June 22, 2006)
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