Waste drainage needs closer watch

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The government should further supervise and control hazardous waste discharged by enterprises and enforce drainage information disclosure regulations, experts said in response to a recent landfill scandal in Beijing.

KB (Beijing) Autosys Co Ltd, a South Korean company that produces auto parts in Miyun County, dumped hazardous waste directly on farmland and in forests for three years, seriously polluting the soil and air of surrounding villages.

Instead of disposing of the waste properly, the company simply dumped it in about 30 holes, the average diameter of which was 30 meters.

The waste was mostly powder from the leftover bits and pieces of the brake blocks, according to Jiang Huanhuan, an employee at the logistics department of KB (Beijing) Autosys.

The case aroused public fury after media brought it to light.

"Many enterprises with heavy hazardous waste in the city are not resorting to licensed companies to dispose of their waste but rely on private ones because of the lower cost, which results in pollution in soil, water and air," said Mao Da, an expert in waste management at Beijing Normal University.

"With poor corporate self-discipline and loose government supervision, the environment as well as public health are falling victim to hazardous-material discharges."

Jiang said his company is a victim as well. "We used a private recycling company for waste treatment and did not realize they were not licensed and had been dealing with the waste this way," he said.

Jiang said the company has been cooperating with a licensed waste treatment enterprise since the end of 2011, after negotiations with residents.

Liu Yuying, a resident of Miyun, filed a lawsuit against the company in 2012 after finding the land she rented has numerous holes with unknown black powder inside them.

 

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