China vows to root out soil pollution

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In addition, a number of small workshops that produce preserved plums, a local delicacy, and factories that make wires and cables have also discharged untreated sewage directly into local rivers, she said.

"The (provincial, city and county) governments have shut down a lot of polluting factories, but there's still a lot to do with regard to the excessive use of fertilizers and pesticides," she added.

Qiu was not the only deputy at the recent two sessions to call for greater efforts to control soil pollution.

Tang Ming, a CPPCC National Committee member and professor of agriculture at the Northwest Agriculture and Forestry University in Yangling, Shaanxi province, also submitted a proposal calling for tougher controls.

He cited data from the environmental and agriculture ministries that show that up to 2009, heavy-metal contamination of the soil caused reductions in grain yields and resulted in a loss of 2 billion yuan ($307 million), and that industrial wastewater was used to irrigate 1.4 million hectares of farmland, causing further contamination.

"Soil contaminated by heavy-metals poses a further risk to human health via the grain and polluted water," he said.

"It's time for governments to tackle soil pollution in the same way we curb air and water pollution."

Administrative reform

To achieve the aims of the plan, the Ministry of Environmental Protection has reformed its administrative structure by eliminating two departments - pollution prevention and control, and pollutants emission control - and setting up three new offices to target air, water and soil pollution.

The reform will streamline the working process and make the efforts to tackle pollution more efficient, according to Chen, the minister.

Moreover, new, binding targets on pollution control have been listed in the five-year plan for the first time. They stipulate that by 2020 the number of days of good air quality in 338 cities must be more than 80 percent per year, In addition, the concentration of PM2.5 - particulate matter with a diameter of less than 2.5 microns, so small that it can enter the bloodstream - should be reduced by 18 percent in major cities by the same year.

The new regulations have been well-received by experts and the public.

Wu Shunze, deputy head of the Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning - a think tank - said the guideline is a signal that the country has shifted the focus of its environmental protection strategies, which is a major reform.

The binding targets will force governments at all levels to impose tougher regulations, and to improve efficiency in their efforts to reduce pollution, "but it's only a start. To move forward, we will need follow-up plans to set more targets for governments," he said.

Barbara Finamore, Asia director at the Natural Resources Defense Council, an international environmental NGO, said the plan represents an important step forward in China's war on pollution, and the most striking feature is the emphasis on enforcement.

"This (to realize the goals, standards and reforms set out in the plan) will require a strong regulatory approach, as well as building the capacity for enforcement and compliance at both the provincial and local levels," she wrote in an e-mail exchange with China Daily.

Meanwhile, experts said the existing action plans on air and water pollution control and prevention are working as planned.

For example, China is making visible progress in controlling air pollution: last year, PM2.5 readings fell by more than 14 percent in 74 major cities, and the Pearl River Delta region achieved overall compliance with the national standard. The improvement in the air quality has been so pronounced that it has been observed by NASA satellites.

Progress has also been made in the control of water pollution. The Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development has completed a wide-ranging survey of severely polluted rivers in urban regions and has set schedules for greater improvements.

"The current situations regarding air, water and soil pollution are different, yet connected with the sources of pollution," said Yang Fuqiang, a senior analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council, who stressed that air and water pollution are far more visible than soil pollution, which means it often goes unnoticed as a result.

About 40 percent of the mercury in China's air is the result of burning coal, and the poisonous element can fall to earth and contaminate soil and water, he said, adding that industries that rely on coal, such as mining, chemicals and power plants, can cause pollution during both extraction and processing.

The three types of pollution are interconnected, so governments should make coordinated efforts to tackle all three, and also take joint controls into consideration when formulating policies, he said.

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