Waste drainage needs closer watch

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"At first I thought people were disposing of garbage, but I was told later the garbage is poisonous," she said. "I can't build my vegetable greenhouse in a land of poison."

Mao said there is no way the company had no idea its hazardous wastes were treated this way, as no licensed waste treatment company will receive the hazardous waste for free.

According to the Beijing Environmental Protection Bureau's pollution prevention department, the city has more than 10 licensed waste treatment companies.

"It costs a lot for a company to have their hazardous waste disposed of at a licensed treatment company, almost 10 times more than kitchen waste," Mao said. "The high cost is the major reason many companies with heavy hazardous discharges avoid their responsibility and resort to illegal workshops or individuals to have the scrap dealt with."

Mao said the illegal workshops usually dump hazardous waste in a hole without any processing, which imposes a serious risk to the soil, water and air.

For example, the powder of leftover bits and pieces buried in the soil was mainly organic resin and antimony sulfide, the latter of which is a poisonous heavy metal that could threaten people's health, he said.

It is not known how much effect the hazardous waste will have on the environment now, but the bureau will further strengthen supervision of such companies, said Duan Qiliang, director of the county's environmental protection bureau.

Dong Liangjie, a former environmental scientist at the University of Hawaii, said the soil pollution is like an environmental time bomb.

The heavy-metal pollution of soil, once imposed, will have a tremendous negative effect and take a long time to repair, he said.

"Prevention is much more effective in bettering the environment than repair after the fact," he said.

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