China’s red line to protect ecology
CHINA issued guidelines on an ecological “red line” yesterday that will declare certain regions under mandatory and rigorous protection.
By the end of 2020, according to a document issued by the General Office of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the General Office of the State Council, the nation should have clearly defined the red line.
Given that the nation’s ecological environment remains fragile and the environmental safety situation is pretty grim, the ecological red line serves as both a “bottom line” and a “lifeline” in safeguarding national ecological safety, it said.
The red line strategy will cover regions with important ecological functions, including water and soil conservation, biodiversity maintenance as well as windbreak and sand-fixation, along with ecologically fragile regions which are prone to soil erosion, desertification and salinization.
Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei, as well as regions along the Yangtze River Economic Belt, are asked to draw up a red line for ecological protection by the end of 2017, while other areas should come up with a red line before the end of 2018.
By the end of 2020, the demarcation of the border and calibration of the regions should be complete and an ecological protection red line system established, it said.
By 2030, the layout of the ecological protection red line will be further optimized, effectively implemented, the ecological function of the regions promoted, and national ecological safety guaranteed, according to the document.
The move aims to ensure protected regions will not be ecologically degraded, and their acreage will not be decreased.
“China started to explore the theory and methods of the red line in 2012 and made a series of pilots programs,” said Lu Jun, deputy head of the Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning.
China’s environmental protection still lags behind its economic status, and decades of breakneck growth have left the country saddled with problems such as smog and contaminated waterways and soil. In one of its latest attempts to fight pollution, China appointed “river chiefs” nationwide in December.
Last year, 720 people were detained for environment-related crimes. Through public tip-offs and random checks, inspectors looked into 33,000 cases and imposed fines totalling 440 million yuan (US$63.6 million) after central government inspections in several provinces and cities, including Beijing and Shanghai.
Last year, a total of 4.05 million high-emission vehicles were taken off the country’s roads.
Partly due to such efforts, Chinese cities reported less PM2.5 pollution last year, with the average density of PM2.5 in 338 cities falling by 6 percent. Meanwhile, days with good air quality rose 2.1 percent from a year ago.
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