China Daily (Hong Kong)

Negligence blamed for pollution of river

City government failed to ensure that rectificat­ion plans were carried out

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top environmen­tal watchdog severely criticized the bureaucrac­y and officials in Qujing, Yunnan province, on Wednesday for failing to correct problems involving the disposal of heavy metal waste that polluted the Pearl River upstream.

The first round of environmen­tal inspection­s nationwide in 2016 found some 328,000 metric tons of industrial heavy metals had been improperly handled in Qujing.

In response, the city had drawn up a rectificat­ion plan ordering Luoping Zinc and Electricit­y Co to safely dispose of 100,000 metric tons of residue containing lead by the end of this year.

However, the city failed to carry out the plan. The environmen­tal inspection office sent Yunnan province a notice in March, urging accelerati­on of corrective efforts, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t said in a statement on Wednesday.

In June, environmen­tal authoritie­s dispatched a team to revisit the site. Inspectors found that the 100,000 metric tons of lead waste had not been dealt with, the statement said.

Meanwhile, the inspection team found another mountain of calcium slag in an open area containing toxic waste, including lead and zinc, it said.

The newly found waste was estimated to weigh more than 100,000 tons, and a mixture of calcium waste and rainwater flowed everywhere, bringing significan­t environmen­tal risks and leaving some parts of the land barren, it said.

The ministry said the company’s flagrant violations are the result of the city government simply shifting the rectificat­ion tasks to the county government and then leaving them alone.

“No effective supervisio­n was carried out after the order from the province and the central inspection team,” the ministry said. “Any derelictio­n of duty by officials will be punished after investigat­ion.”

The Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t recently exposed a number of cases of derelictio­n of duty by local government­s after dispatchin­g inspection teams elsewhere to check on whether problems previously found had been rectified.

Zhai Qing, vice-minister of the ministry, even ordered local officials to move close to a dirty river and live with local people until the water was no longer black and stinky, after rectificat­ion work was flagrantly ignored by the local government in Shantou, Guangdong province, Legal Daily reported.

No effective supervisio­n was carried out after the order from the province and the central inspection team.”

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