Reports that Green GDP accounting could be
abandoned due to massive local resistance are being grossly
exaggerated, a top official of the environmental watchdog said
yesterday. In reality, the project is to be expanded to the entire
Chinese mainland.
Despite reports claiming certain provinces were
dropping out of the green accounting project seen as harming their
own interests, the official told China Daily that the 2005
report will "actually expand to cover 31 provinces and
municipalities," showing "a great leap forward for the concept of
Green GDP".
Officially called the Environmentally-Adjusted GDP
Accounting Report, the Green GDP report is set to emphasize the
amount of waste created to both public and officials the waste
created, and environmental damage done, in the process of economic
growth.
Simply put, Green GDP is calculated by deducting the
cost of natural resources' depletion and environmental degradation
from traditional GDP.
The report for 2005 will be released next month, said
Pan Yue, vice-minister of the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA).
The first report, for 2004, was published in September
last year. Officials told China Daily that the Green
GDP report involves complex accounting procedures which take around
two years longer than the compilation of conventional GDP figures
for a fiscal year.
The 2004 report showed that the financial loss caused
by environmental pollution totaled as much as 511.8 billion yuan
(US$64 billion), or 3.05 percent of the nation's economy, based on
the traditional GDP accounting method.
The new report will include two further indices
increasing the accuracy of the evaluation of environmental losses,
Pan said. One will compute the cost caused by transportation
pollution; and the other will cover the cost of pollution
clean-up.
The effort was launched in March 2004 by SEPA and the
National Bureau of Statistics. In the last two years, an accounting
analysis has been made to quantify environmental pollution, imputed
treatment cost and the environmental degradation cost for 42
industries.
Pilot projects were launched in the three
municipalities of Beijing, Tianjin and Chongqing, and the seven
provinces of Hebei, Liaoning, Anhui, Zhejiang, Sichuan, Guangdong
and Hainan.
Pan admitted that initially, SEPA faced a plethora of
difficulties ranging from technical ones to resistance from
regional and industrial officials. But much to his relief, SEPA has
managed to work with the 10 regional governments to stick through,
Pan said.
The general environmental situation remains bleak, as
a result of what Pan called catering to immediate interests and
reckless energy consumption.
Last year, China flunked its target of cutting major
pollutants by 2 percent, which instead witnessed a growth of 2
percent.
(China Daily January 23, 2007)
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