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China's New Pollution Rules Help Curb Official Interference

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Huge Worry Over Super Smog in China
Xiao Lu Chu/Getty Images
ByGERALDINE DING
April 26, 2014, 1:00 PM

BEIJING April 26, 2014— -- China took a significant step this week to tackle its enormous pollution problem and the new regulations include a provision for transparency that curbs the interference of local officials.

The new regulations, the most far reaching changes to the country's environment law in 25 years, were approved on Thursday and were three years in the making. The will take effect on Jan. 1.

The tougher rules come amid mounting outcry over China's pollution woes that are a result of China's growth-at-all-costs economic model. It has left air quality so bad that people routinely wear air filters on the worst days. Latest figures from Chinese ministries revealed that nearly three-fifths of China’s water was found to be either moderately or seriously polluted in 2013, while close to a fifth of the country’s arable land is polluted.

The new rules will give the Ministry of Environmental Protection the authority to take stronger punitive action, including shutting down and confiscating the assets of polluters. Company bosses could be detained for up to 15 days if they fail to submit environmental impact assessments or refuse to comply with orders to suspend production. They also impose an "ecological red line" that will declare certain regions off-limits to polluting industry.

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“China is now facing unprecedented environmental challenges. In the meantime, people’s awareness of the issue is rising and they are expressing more clearly their willingness to be informed and to participate,” said Ma Jun, head of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, an independent environmental group.

Ma praised the amendments to the environmental law.

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“It’s quite progressive for them to strengthen the enforcement of environmental protection, increase the cost of violation to polluters and hold officials accountable in their management of the local environment,” said Ma.

The biggest breakthrough may be in the area of public participation. A special chapter of the law was created to ensure that information on environmental monitoring and impact assessments are made public.

“This clearly gives the public the right to know, to participate and to supervise. The environmental rights of the people are best guarded by ensuring that they have these procedural rights,” said Ma.

This is extremely important in China because “the enforcement of environmental laws have long been hampered by the interference of local officials. Without this public participation, the new measures will be very hard to enforce,” said Ma. He added that the expansion of transparency in China helps major brands like Apple to use sourcing power to motivate positive change by suppliers.

He is not certain that the new rules are sufficient, however.

“Increasing penalties for violators is not enough. If you don’t break the barrier of interference (from local officials) and try to change their behavior, they will continue. This is because they know that the cost of their violation remains low,” he said.

“Ultimately, local officials still put growth ahead of environmental protection. The tougher the rules are, the tougher it is to implement them because the greater the resistance,” Ma said.

But Ma is encouraged by the changes in the environmental law.

“While implementation remains difficult, the latest rules give hope to China’s war on pollution,” he said.

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