An official's track record in pollution control is to become a
major factor in determining the overall achievements of an
individual, according to new government guidelines.
Zhou Shengxian, head of the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA), said on Monday that the decision was taken
after SEPA found the total volume of major pollutants, such as
sulphur dioxide, discharged during the first six months of this
year was still up on the same period last year.
These results are especially damaging given local governments
and factories have signed responsibility pledges to reduce
pollutant discharge with the central government.
"Excessive fixed-asset investment and lax environmental
protection supervision should be blamed for the rise of pollutant
discharge," Zhou said.
He said officials who cheat or hide the facts on pollution
management will be "seriously dealt with" and officials who prove
incompetent at reducing pollutant discharge will also be "severely
punished".
Zhou reiterated that China has set the target of reducing the
total volume of pollutant discharge by two percent compared to last
year. China will no longer pursue economic growth by sacrificing
the environment, he added.
Local governments that signed responsibility pledges with the
central government on reducing pollutant discharge must fulfill
their pledge, otherwise the government is no longer entitled to
approve new industrial projects, said Zhou.
A factory that fails to fulfill its pledge will be temporarily
shut down until its pollutant processing capability has improved,
he said.
SEPA will dispatch special groups to examine the work of local
governments and factories to reduce pollutant discharge.
Earlier this month, SEPA disclosed that it will set up 11 branch
offices to monitor and investigate environmental issues, bypassing
regional bureaus.
The offices are directly led by SEPA, as regional environment
departments, which are affiliated to local governments, also proved
inefficient and reticent about exposing pollution scandals that
involved local officials.
The offices will help strengthen the monitoring of potential
environmental hazards and reduce factories' pollutant discharge,
said a leading SEPA official.
(Xinhua News Agency August 15, 2006)
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