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China Supreme Court sets up environment tribunal
CCTV
July 3, 2014


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A man wearing a mask walks past trees shrouded with pollution haze in Beijing, China Thursday, March 27, 2014. Air pollution kills about 7 million people worldwide every year according to a new report from the World Health Organization published Tuesday, March 25. The agency said air pollution triggers about 1 in 8 deaths and has now become the single biggest environmental health risk, ahead of other dangers like second-hand smoke [AP]

To give legal backing to Beijing’s newly declared war on pollution, the country’s Supreme Court has set up a tribunal for environment cases to better implement the revised environmental protection law, said a court spokesman in Beijing on Thursday.

China Environmental News, published by China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection, said Deng Xuelin had been appointed as the presiding judge of the Environmental and Resources Tribunal of the Supreme People’s Court.

“The tribunal will hear civil cases involving pollution, exploitation of natural resources and conservation of natural environment such as forests and rivers,” said Sun Jungong, Supreme People’s Court (SPC) spokesperson, at a press conference.

It will also hear appeal cases forwarded from lower courts, supervise the trial of environment cases at lower courts and draft judicial explanations about such cases, Sun said.

The SPC, the spokesperson said, expects that the tribunal can “set the standards for trials of environment cases”.

A decades-old growth-at-all-costs economic model has spoiled much of China’s water, skies and soil.

About 134 special environment tribunals have been established at local courts in 16 provincial divisions since the first was founded in southwest China’s Guizhou Province in 2007.

Following the example of the Supreme Court, all provincial high courts will also set up similar institutions, said Zheng Xuelin, chief judge of the tribunal, at the press conference on Thursday.

According to Zheng, environment cases account for a very small proportion of China’s court battles, nearly 30000 out of more than 11 million.

Zheng admitted that it is still difficult for people to file an environment case since courts are held back by technical problems such as lack of practical standards to assess damage, and in some cases interference from local governments backing powerful firms.

China’s top legislature revised the 1989 environmental protection law in April, imposing much harsher punishment on polluters and heavier liability on governments.

 
China to Deploy Space-Air-Ground Sensors for Environment Protection
(Xinhua) 21:38, August 04, 2015

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BEIJING, Aug. 4 -- China will build a space-air-ground integrated sensing system to detect and stop pollution, according to the Ministry of Environmental Protection Tuesday.

China's central authorities decided in July to build a comprehensive ecological environment monitoring system that will have the ability for automatic early warning using surveillance sites across the country.

The ministry said it will retake the power of environmental monitoring from local authorities, so that the country will have a unified standard for pollution detection and punishment.

A total of 2.5 billion yuan (402.8 million U.S.dollars) has already been invested to build the system, the ministry said.

So far, there has been more than 2,700 surveillance sites with 60,000 professional staff spread all over the country, covering 338 cities.

The ministry said it will also utilize satellites for remote sensing and drones to conduct regular surveillance on air and water quality.

China to Deploy Space-Air-Ground Sensors for Environment Protection - People's Daily Online
 
China's environment in 2015: a year in review
Ma Tianjie
23.12.2015

This year saw China introduce bold new regulation to tackle its environmental crisis. But can these laws be enforced effectively?

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Nantong, a coastal city in Jiangsu province, is trying to clean up the legacy of fast economic growth (Image by Vlad Meytin)

Just as 2015 entered its final weeks, Beijing’s municipal government declared an air pollution “red alert” for the first time since the policy was established in 2013. The move typified a year when air pollution once again dominated environmental coverage, at home and abroad.

The announcement was sent out very late in the day. The entire city, including its officials, scrambled to make sense of the measures that had never been implemented before. People were asking: which kind of cars with what kind of plate numbers are allowed on the road tomorrow? (The government asked motorists to stay at home on certain days in an emergency bid to bring down car emissions).

To some extent, Beijing’s “red alert” experience epitomises China’s environmental journey of 2015: lots of good signals, with largely mixed results.

The sudden announcement that caught the entire city off guard (pollution levels were not nearly as bad as the 'Airpocalypse' episode days before) seemed to be the direct result of instructions from the top leadership, according to information released by the Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP).

While this once again shows how responsive the current leadership is toward public sentiments, it also demonstrates the gap between intention and reality: it has taken the top leadership and repeated appeals from the Environment Minister to get China’s capital city to implement what is clearly written on paper.

Distinguishing between intention and reality is the key to a fair assessment of China’s 2015 environmental achievements. Too often, intentions are expressed loud and clear, whereas results are muddled and messy. A look at the country’s environmental scorecard this year will show that while well-intentioned policy declarations are not always “empty words”, it takes calculated, strategic efforts to translate them into actual progress.

The new environmental protection law

Laws often embody noble intentions. On 1 January 2015, China’s new Environmental Protection Law came into force amid high expectations. From the text of the law, observers both within and outside China could clearly sense the urgency with which the country was taking environmental issues.

Polluting companies will face fines without a ceiling; NGOs are welcome to initiate public interest lawsuits; and local governments will be held accountable for implementing environmental policies.

But the law has to navigate a reality that is defined by fundamental features of how governance in China is structured, which leads to unbalanced results. On the one hand, the law seems to enhance enforcement on the local level, largely by removing arbitrary and out-of-date limitations that bind the hands of local environmental protection bureaus (EPBs).

The new law authorises EPBs to fine violating companies on an accumulative basis, without a ceiling, which is a departure from the long-time practice of one-off fines capped to amounts that are trivial to most companies today. According to data released by the Ministry of Environment Protection, during the first eight months of new law’s implementation in 2015, there were 405 cases of “accumulative fines”, worth a total of 330 million yuan.

It means on average each case involved more than 800,000 yuan in fines, already exceeding the highest 500,000 yuan fine limit in the previous version of the law.

But like other measures in the new law that are meant to strengthen the teeth of local law enforcement, they are valuable when local authorities intend to use them.

When they don’t, neither the central government nor the public has effective ways to compel them to enforce the rules. The new law aims to change that by including accountability clauses for government officials. But so far result in this area is unclear.

A recent review states that the “sleeping beauty” phenomenon (when laws and regulations never get activated) is still a widespread problem on the local level.

Moreover, law enforcement is often driven by the “personal interest and temperament” of the officials, which tends to further complicate the problem.

Similarly, despite a strong push to encourage public interest environmental lawsuits by NGOs, so far only 36 such cases have been brought to court, which is dwarfed by the number of pollution incidents and violations that are actually happening all over the country. Interference from local government is still considered a reason why courts hesitate to accept such cases.

Peaking carbon emissions

This year was also marked by increasing detail and engagement from China on the country’s efforts to stabilise the global climate. Following a ground-breaking announcement in November 2014, that China would peak carbon emissions by 2030, this year the Chinese government further elaborated on this target, by proposing a fairly ambitious carbon intensity goal and a timeline for a nationwide carbon trading system. These commitments from China made a big contribution to the successfully negotiated Paris Agreement on 12 December.

Climate change is an example of where the intention of China’s top leadership matches well with reality on the ground. For one thing, the Chinese economy is already undergoing significant changes that put downward pressure on demand for coal, China’s single biggest source for primary energy. These changes include a shift away from heavy industries, such as steel and cement, towards higher energy efficiency.

In January, China recorded a drop in coal production for the first time in this century, a trend that many say will be irreversible. Latest data released by the Chinese authority suggests that the decline of coal output is continuing. China’s resolute battle against air pollution is also a major risk to China’s production and use of coal, and such issues became increasingly seared on the public consciousness this year in light of the environmental documentary “Under the Dome,” made by former CCTV journalist Chai Jing.

The instant popularity of the documentary released in February, 200 million clicks in a matter of days, underlined the depth of public concern on the air pollution issue. Notwithstanding the somewhat perplexing fate of the documentary afterward, the strong signal sent by the public reaction did create more urgency and political momentum. More stringent measures against coal were put in place later in the year. Such factors all indicate that China’s carbon pledges have a solid foundation.

The new minister and his reforms

When China appointed its new Environment Minister at the beginning of this year, it was hailed internationally as a wise move. For the first time an established environmental scientist holds the country’s green gavel. As soon as he stepped into his new role, Minister Chen Jining made it clear to the nation that reforming the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) system would be at the top of his agenda.

China’s EIA system has long suffered from being a rubber stamp. Loopholes in the system have also encouraged rampant rent-seeking. Those EIA agencies affiliated with the Ministry of Environment Protection (MEP) or local EPBs enjoy popularity among those who seek to have their projects approved.

Government officials sat on the boards of EIA firms, creating a clear conflict of interest, while companies that were overseen by the MEP also had shares in companies carrying out assessments. This served to guarantee “green lights” for projects that all too often were flawed in their design or were clearly detrimental to the environment.

The huge blasts in Tianjin on 12 August that killed 173 people and injured hundreds of others illustrated the deadly consequences of shoddy gate-keeping.

In that instance however, the EIA only played a partial role in a string of fateful decisions that allowed the dangerous warehouse to operate in the vicinity of a densely populated neighbourhood.

Minister Chen vowed to clean up the EIA system by first severing the link between his ministry and its affiliated EIA agencies. So far, results look promising: six prominent EIA consultancies have transformed into privately owned companies and two have completely given up their certificates to provide EIA services.

But for Mr Chen, this is an easy task to start with. After all, those EIA-related agencies all fall under the ministry’s leadership, and therefore have to follow the directives of their big boss. The true test would be pushing the reform into provinces, where local governments have more incentives to keep such affiliated agencies under their control.

What’s even more challenging is the MEP’s initiative to further embed EIAs into the country’s decision making process, especially in the early planning stages, where blueprints of entire regions are being drafted. A new regulatory agenda, unveiled in October, included the revamping of China’s EIA Law and its Planning Environmental Impact Assessment (PEIA) regulation.

But such initiatives would have to overcome resistance from departments that are traditionally in charge of planning, and are accustomed to treating environmental impacts as an afterthought. They are often not bound by directives from their environmental colleagues.

In this regard, the MEP has made a smart move by harnessing the political shockwaves of the Tianjin accident. In October, the ministry dispatched numerous teams to check the integrity of PEIA processes of major chemical installations all over China, as a way to boost the status of PEIA in the political agenda.

Conservation

The past 12 months was also a big year in efforts to protect endangered species. In May, China implemented a crackdown on ivory trade. In a matter of months, the country increased the intensity of its response from an import ban to a nationwide ban on trading products. A presidential commitment to eliminate the ivory trade was a further attempt to buttress government efforts.

According to a recent investigation by conservation groups, those measures appear to have cut ivory prices in the Chinese market by half, indicating a weakening demand for products that are driving elephants towards extinction in many parts of Africa. It is an example of how effective awareness campaigns combined with measures to save endangered species, are able to curb consumption.

The growing Chinese middle class and its demand for products, ranging from fireflies to pangolins, just to name a few, is a reality that every serious conservation campaign should address.

The panda’s fate in 2015 depicts a much more complex picture. Despite new data reported in March showing the total number of wild pandas is growing, the trend of increasingly fragmented communities is more disconcerting to conservationists. Later in the year, we saw reports showing the habitats of pandas threatened by questionable “forest regeneration” projects. The challenge faced by panda, a national symbol and an element in Chinese diplomacy and ‘soft power’, exemplifies the difficulty in bridging intention with reality.

The plight of China’s most cherished animal highlights the importance of addressing the fundamentals underlying the country’s ecological crisis, including: proper ownership regimes for natural resources; science-based spatial planning that ensures the integrity of ecosystems; and a strong governance system that make sure policies are honoured on the ground.

All these elements are included in the recently announced, grand “Eco-civilisation” initiative from the top echelon of the Party. Putting those concepts into practice will be another huge task for the country’s environmental policy makers and practitioners.

Cleaning up water and soil

China also made headlines this year by releasing a “10-point water plan” in April that contains many far-sighted measures against widespread water pollution in the country. It is believed that a similar soil plan is also in the making. What is interesting about the 10-point plan is that for each action point, a leading ministry and its supporting ministries are clearly assigned.

This could be the policy-makers' way to overcome bureaucratic buck-passing that is characteristic of the Chinese system. Given the current disciplinary pressure on the Chinese officialdom, this trick might actually work.

For many years, people have been talking about a potential “turning point” in China’s environmental trajectory.

With air pollution in China showing signs of mild improvement and a carbon peak almost in sight, there are reasons to believe that Chinese society might be at a tipping point of fundamental environmental transformation.

The ironic thing is that the tipping point, where every problem seems to be at its worst, is also the most uncomfortable place to be at right now.

China's environment in 2015: a year in review | Ma Tianjie - China Dialogue
 
At last, a bit of good news on the air pollution in Beijing.

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Beijing's air clean-up shows promise
2016-05-27 09:27 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

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He Kebin, dean of environmental studies at Tsinghua University (L) and Li Xiaohua, deputy director of Beijing EnvironmentProtection Bureau (M) take part in the roundtable discussion. HOU LIQIANG / CHINA DAILY

Experts say Beijing's air quality will meet the World Health Organization's Grade 1 standards, as ever growing public concern and stern resolve from China's central government have put great pressure on local government leaders.

The comments came as a new report — A Review of Air Pollution Control in Beijing: 1998-2013 — was made public on Wednesday at United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) headquarters in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, where the second session of the UN Environment Assembly is being held.

The report said a comprehensive air pollution program launched in Beijing in 1998 has been largely successful.

Carried out by UNEP and the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau, the report found that carbon monoxide and sulphur levels are now below limits set by China's National Ambient Air Quality Standards, while nitrogen dioxide and PM 10 levels are also inching closer to standards.

The trend has been driven by a decrease in coal consumption in the power sector and a drop in vehicle emissions resulting from vehicle emission control measures, the report said.

Coal use fell from a peak of 9 million tons in 2005 to 6.44 million tons in 2013, while the 2013 levels of carbon monoxide dropped by 76 percent compared to 1998.

Li Xiaohua, deputy director of the Beijing Environment Protection Bureau, said in a media roundtable at the UNEA that the satisfying situation continued from 2013 to 2015.

Air quality improvement continues from 2013 to now with an annual concentration of SO2 down to 13.5 micrograms per cubic metre (μg/m3) by 2015 and PM 2.5 concentrations down from 89.5 μg/m3 in 2013 to 80.6 μg/m3 in 2015, she said.

With the 2013-2017 Beijing Clean Air Action Plan implemented in 2013, by the end of 2015, the core area of Beijing city had become a coal-free zone, more than 1.22 million old polluting vehicles had been scrapped, 8,800 diesel buses had been retrofitted, more than 1,000 polluting enterprises were closed or relocated and trees have been planted on an additional 70,000 hectares of land.

A working group from Beijing and six of its neighboring provinces and municipalities was established to coordinate air pollution control at the regional level, as about 30 percent of the city's PM 2.5 is found to be contributed by regional migration, she added.

There are still "great challenges for the further improvement of air quality in Beijing," she said, "as people have higher expectations of environmental quality and the central government has raised clear targets for the capital's environmental and ecological quality."

"We are confident that we will be able to have better air quality and better cities through our sustained efforts," Li said. "We are always open for cooperation and sharing our experience and lessons with cities around the world through the UNEP platform."

He Kebin, dean of environmental studies at Tsinghua University, said: "We still have some way to go before achieving the World Health Organization air quality standards. Nevertheless, we are confident that we are on the right path."

He said Beijing will be able to meet air quality Grade 1 by WHO guidelines for China in 10 to 15 years.

He said the central government has asked provincial governors to sign a commitment, which has been published. Rankings will be issued for air quality and governors with bad rankings will be criticized.

"They will feel very strong pressure from that," He said.
 
Beijing experience in battling air pollution worth sharing
Xinhua, May 25, 2016

A UN report lauded Beijing's efforts to battle air pollution but said it needs to do more to meet particulate matter standards.

"A Review of Air Pollution Control in Beijing: 1998-2013" was published by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), through cooperation with Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau, the bureau said Wednesday.

In the past 15 years, Beijing's resident population grew by 70 percent, the number of registered vehicles increased by 300 percent and energy consumption rose by 77 percent, UNEP executive director Achim Steiner remarked in the foreword to the report.

"Remarkably, concentrations of key pollutants, such as sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and inhalable particulate matter, decreased by 78 percent, 24 percent and 43 percent, respectively. Notwithstanding significant challenges, the city improved air quality even as it maintained fast paced growth," he wrote.

"As the capital of the world's most populous country, Beijing's experience in controlling air pollution against a backdrop of rapid expansion is a story that should be shared with other emerging economies and burgeoning cities," he said.

Beijing's solution was a combination of energy structure optimization, coal-fired emission control, vehicle emission control and enhanced air quality monitoring, said He Kebin, director of the Environment College of Tsinghua University and one of the authors of the report.

"The report recognized Beijing's continual efforts to improve air quality. The monitoring data showed that the integrated approaches of legislative, administrative, economic and technical measures have taken effect. In the future, technical measures will be an important measure," He said.

The report also offered some suggestions, including improving city planning; optimizing the layout of city functions; promoting a development plan for Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei; promoting clean energy; in-depth control of coal-fired emissions; and further development of the transit system.
 
Should have done this ten years ago. What the heck? It's better late than never.

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China announces soil pollution controls
China.org.cn, June 1, 2016

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China will conduct regular investigations into soil quality every 10 years, and establish a database for soil by 2018.
[File photo]

An action plan on tackling soil pollution in China was released Tuesday.

The Action Plan for Soil Pollution Prevention and Control aims to improve soil quality and ensure safe agricultural products and a healthy living environment for people, according to the State Council, or China's cabinet.

The document said China will curb worsening soil pollution by 2020, put soil pollution risks under control by 2030, and form a virtuous cycle in the ecosystem by 2050.

The country is already carrying out soil pollution surveys, promoting legislation on soil pollution prevention and control, enhancing land management, protecting uncontaminated, supervising pollution sources, treating and restoring polluted soil, and increasing support for research in environmental protection.

According to the document, by 2020, 90 percent of polluted arable land and land used for industries and enterprises should be made safe for use, and the figure will be increased to 95 percent by 2030.

The action plan said China, through surveys, aims to find out the size and the distribution of polluted arable land and land used for key industries and enterprises by 2018 and 2020 respectively. Their influences on agricultural products and environment will also be checked out.

China will conduct regular investigations into soil quality every 10 years, and establish a database for soil by 2018, said the document.

By 2020, 13,340 square kilometers of heavily polluted farmland will be returned into forest and grassland, according to the plan.

The cabinet also ordered to include soil assessment in environmental assessment for construction projects discharging major pollutants.

Lists of industrial and mining enterprises that are identified as key targets for soil pollution will be established and released to the public, said the plan.

To control soil pollution by heavy metals, China has vowed to cut the discharge of major heavy metal pollutants in key industries by 10 percent from 2013 by 2020.

This is the third pollution action plan issued by the cabinet, following those targeting air and water pollution.
 
This is innovative and interesting. Killing 2 birds with one stone. Getting rid of dirty sh*t and getting clean energy.

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Innovative Sludge-to-Energy Plant Makes a Breakthrough in China
May 31, 2016 By Coco Liu

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XIANGYANG, China – This factory located in a quiet island of central China’s Xiangyang city probably won’t grab your attention. Its stainless steel complex and three-story office building look similar to any other. But don’t be fooled by appearances. The plant here holds a secret that has lured more than 100 Chinese mayors to pay their respects and uncover how they can replicate its success.

On any given day, the factory eats up several hundred tons of human excreta and other waste – a smelly, hazardous slurry called sludge – and spits out enough clean energy to fuel 400 cars. In a country struggling with pollution from massive quantities of untreated sludge and seeking new sources of clean energy, policymakers want to get more sludge-to-energy projects up and running soon.

Already, about 400 miles east of the factory, Hefei is putting together its first experiment converting municipal sludge into energy. Beijing has also rolled out a plan to tap into the energy potential of sludge, along with other cities such as Chengdu, Changsha, and Chongqing.

But before this project, none could be sure that such an effort could be financially and environmentally viable in China.

Sludge is a rising threat to China’s environment. As the number of wastewater treatment plants in the country has increased in response to water pollution, so has the volume of the resulting byproduct. According to recent estimates by Essence Securities, 35 million tons of sludge were produced by Chinese wastewater treatment plants in 2015, a 16 percent increase from the previous year.

Sludge Mountains

Municipal sludge is often dumped into landfills or even back into the environment untreated. According to one study, by Tsinghua University, nearly half is used as fertilizer by farmers. If untreated, sludge can contaminate the soil, air, and groundwater. Toxic chemicals become part of the food chain, making their way onto dining room tables.

Chinese leaders are aware of the problem. Last year, the central government mandated prefecture-level cities make 90 percent of their sludge toxic-free by 2020 – up from the current requirement of 70 percent – and employ proper disposal solutions. In the past, though, similar efforts have flopped.

Chinese cities have tried to build sludge incinerators or burn the byproduct as an alternative fuel in coal-fired power stations. While helping to reduce sludge in the short term, such burning is expensive and requires a great deal of energy. “Sludge has a high level of water content, even after dehydrating,” explains Nawon Kim, an environment specialist with the Asian Development Bank. “In order to prepare it for burning, it requires a lot of additional energy to dry.”

Recycling nutrient-rich sludge into compost is not a quick fix either. China’s Ministry of Agriculture has banned sludge-generated compost from being used on farmlands due to concerns over heavy metal contamination. And while the country’s tree growers welcome the use of sludge, industry players say the market demand is limited.

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Necessity, the Mother of Innovation

For now, much of China’s sludge ends up in landfills, bumping up against the limit of increasingly scarce land resources and creating environmental hazards. In 2009, huge quantities of sludge came bursting up from the ground in Shenzhen after landfilling put so much pressure on the water table it erupted. The pollution flowed into a nearby river and all the way to neighboring Hong Kong.

But for TOVEN, a Wuhan-headquartered Chinese firm specializing in waste-to-energy technology, these challenges have provided an opportunity. In 2011, after Xiangyang failed in an initial attempt to turn its sludge into compost, the company pitched municipal officials on a completely different approach. Thus began a smelly and slippery five-year journey.

“Where we are standing now was all covered by sludge back in 2011,” Dou Wenlong, the company executive, tells me in his marbled conference room.

“Sludge is basically toilet waste,” Dou continues. “At that time, about 150,000 tons of sludge piled up here – all left by the previous compost project operator. Just imagine being surrounded by 150,000 tons of toilet waste. The smell was unbearable. I couldn’t eat anything when I first came.”

After two months testing sludge samples and adjusting anaerobic digestion techniques, Dou and his team got used to the foul odor, he said. However, the challenges of working at the site continued.

During the company’s first few years, flies assailed engineers throughout the day. And when Dou and others walked outside, they had to watch where they stepped. Once sludge begins to dry, it forms a semi-solid surface that vegetation can take root in, luring people into thinking it is safe. Dou remembers making many mistakes in the early years and stepping into semi-solid sludge sometimes reaching up to the knee. “I lost so many of my pants and shoes,” Dou says, with a laugh.

There were technical challenges too. Sludge in China contains low organic matter levels – about 40 to 50 percent – due to sewage systems that include both municipal stormwater runoff and wastewater from households. In comparison, international sludge-to-energy plants frequently have material that’s up to 70 percent organic matter. Organic matter is a key ingredient for producing methane, which can later be captured to generate power.

Dou, who visited almost all the sludge treatment plants in Europe, knew that adopting strategies such like preheating solid waste could help increase the levels of organic matter and boost energy production. But the technology to implement such a solution did not exist in China at the time, and the company did not want to rely on imports. Dou and his team decided to develop their own equipment and learn the hard way.

“Once we were looking for a suitable pressure compensation, and we had tested dozens, if not hundreds, of pressure compensations already,” Dou recalls about one crucial component. “None of these met our expectation, but testing more devices meant spending more money. It was a risky decision. We were really stressed out as we knew some decisions could cost the company.”

An Extra Ingredient

Luckily their efforts paid off, thanks to some ingenious engineering and a surprising ally: Xiangyang’s restaurants.

Since the project went online in 2012, not only has the plant treated all the aged sludge that piled high at the site when Dou and his staff first arrived, but it also handles fresh sludge and kitchen waste.

Every day, sludge generated by the Xiangyang’s 2 million residents is delivered here by truck or pipeline. The plant mixes the sludge with kitchen waste collected from restaurants to increase organic matter, heats the mixture to temperatures as high as 130 degrees Celsius (266 degrees Fahrenheit), and sends it through a process called co-digestion.

Two 20-meter high, silver-colored anaerobic digestion tanks inhale 450 tons of sludge and kitchen waste and exhale at least 12,000 cubic meters of methane. The factory then burns half of the methane to power its operation and processes the rest into compressed natural gas.

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The compressed natural gas is sold at a nearby gas station to local taxi drivers, helping to meet the city’s growing demand for cleaner-burning transportation fuels. What’s left from the solid waste is either sterilized to be used in fertilizer or converted into biochar, an alternative soil used for potted trees.

Stretching the Dollar

“This is an efficient way to get rid of sludge in the context of China,” says Zhong Lijin, an expert at the Beijing office of the World Resources Institute, a think tank based in Washington, DC.

Zhong and her colleagues conducted a case study on the Xiangyang sludge-to-energy project in 2013. Their findings, published in December 2015, show that compared to other disposal methods, such as turning sludge into compost or burning it at incineration facilities, the methane conversion costs less while at the same time generating commercially viable products.

Dou declined to disclose the project’s revenue, but said it is profitable. He added that some benefits go beyond the company’s balance sheet.

As Dou explained, the island where the facility is located used to be a pariah for investment because of its rotten egg smell. But since the facility started operating, the pollution has begun to fade. Last year, investors from Hong Kong unveiled a $1.7 billion development plan for Xiangyang, the majority of which is intended for luxury resorts, golf courses, and marina clubs on the island.

“You wanted to know our revenue? I think it’s fair to say $1.7 billion,” Dou says.

There are environmental benefits as well. Until his company treated all the aged sludge in 2015, Dou said some of it was just 50 meters (164 feet) away from Han River, an important tributary of the Yangtze. Xiangyang is along the central route of China’s South-North Water Transfer Project, a multi-decade infrastructure project that will channel 44.8 billion cubic meters of freshwater annually from the Yangtze River in southern China to the more arid and industrialized north. Protecting these waters from sludge runoff reduces the treatment and energy costs to clean it – important savings in a country with growing water constraints.

Change on the Horizon?

The World Resources Institute report says compared with landfill and incineration methods for dealing with sludge, the plant could reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than 95 percent over the course of its lifetime.

If 10 percent of the sludge generated in China last year was treated in the same way, it would have reduced greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to 380 million tons of carbon dioxide, roughly equal to Ukraine’s total emissions in 2012.

As promising as this may sound, replicating the Xiangyang plant elsewhere remains a challenge. Experts say that it is conventional wisdom that converting sludge into energy is unprofitable in China, due to low organic matter levels, and it takes time for industry players to change their minds.

A lack of supportive policies from the central government is another barrier. Dou said that unlike wastewater treatment, the regulation for sludge treatment does not come with a penalty and is therefore hard to enforce. Local policymakers have little incentive, in terms of their own promotion up the party ladder, to pay attention.

Even though current regulations require at least 70 percent of sludge in Chinese cities to be treated, media reports, from Beijing to Shanghai continue to uncover evidence they are being ignored. In Wuhan, for instance, un-supervised dumping turned a piece of postcard-like forestland into quagmires the size of football pitches.

But change may be on the horizon. The project in Xiangyang demonstrates that sludge-to-energy plants can be successful in China. And in an article published earlier this month by the newspaper Southern Weekly, Zhang Yue, an official with the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development said party leaders are considering including sludge treatment in municipal government pollution reduction targets, with new regulations to be released soon.

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Coco Liu is a researcher for the Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum and an award-winning journalist with a reporting focus on China’s energy and climate change issues.

This report was made possible with support from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency through the Global Methane Initiative and The Henry Luce Foundation.

Sources: Asian Development Bank, Caixin, Central People’s Government of the People’s Republic of China, China News, Essence Securities, Infzm.com, Sing Tao Daily Limited, Southern Weekly, Tsinghua University, World Resources Institute.

Photo Credit: The Xiangyang sludge-to-energy plant, used with permission courtesy of TOVEN. Infographic: Siqi Han/China Environment Forum.
 
China's top legislature to review implementation of law on environment
Source: Xinhua | 2016-06-03 20:52:44 | Editor: huaxia

BEIJING, June 3 (Xinhua) -- The top legislature this month will start a nationwide inspection on the enforcement of the Environmental Protection Law, the first since it was revised in 2014.

Five teams of senior lawmakers will be dispatched to eight provinces and autonomous regions, according to a press release from the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee issued Friday.

The NPC Standing Committee gave 23 provincial legislatures permission to manage their own inspections.

Lawmakers will review whether local governments and their environment departments have carried out their duties, implemented pollution control measures, monitored polluters and punished offenders.

The inspection will be the first since the revised law took effect in January 2015. The law is considered the strictest ever, imposing harsh punishment on polluters and highlighting the government's duty.

The inspection teams will produce a report in September that will be submitted to the NPC Standing Committee in October.
 
Anything that cleans up pollution will be good for the people, country and ultimately the economy.

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China's fight to save its soil
2016-06-02 09:00 | Xinhua | Editor: Mo Hong'e

War on soil pollution was officially declared in China on Tuesday with the release of an action plan to rehabilitate the country's vast tracts of poisoned land.

Cleaning up the mess from decades of industrialization and questionable farming practices will be a long hard journey and the plan sets three significant milestones.

By 2020, the decline in soil quality and the expansion of polluted areas will have been arrested. By 2030, all risks will be under control. By 2050, a virtuous cycle will have been established to ensure that rejuvenated soil remains that way.

The State Council, China's cabinet, have decreed that by 2020, 90 percent of polluted land, regardless of how it is used, must be made safe, rising to 95 percent by 2030.

Soil surveys are underway. Legislation on preventing and controlling soil pollution has been put in place with more in the pipeline. Land management practices are to be brought into the 21st century, uncontaminated land will be protected, sources of pollution will be more heavily supervised than ever. Money will be poured into research on restoring damaged soil and environmental protection in general.

The plan may bring some hope to increasingly health conscious Chinese shoppers. Concern is widespread that agricultural produce may be as, or even more, toxic as the land on which it is grown.

YOU ARE WHAT YOU EAT

Tang Long, a resident of Nanning, capital of south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, pays over the odds for imported cereal as he believes domestic rice products are bad for his baby daughter.

"Even if there is nothing wrong with the processing, rice grown on contaminated land is unlikely to be safe," he said, unwilling to risk his daughter's health.

Tang's concerns may be somewhat extreme, but they are not groundless. According to the ministries concerned, about 16 percent of all land surveyed and about a fifth of arable land is polluted by heavy metals such as cadmium, arsenic, lead and mercury. About 3.33 million hectares of arable land, an area the size of Belgium, are not suitable for growing crops.

Shen Lifa, a Guangxi rice farmer, said his family never eat their own produce. Shen has made a fortune growing selenium-rich rice that sells for four to five times the price of ordinary rice.

Selenium-rich food is believed to help prevent cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease, but farmers, driven by profits, add chemical fertilizer to force high levels of selenium in the food, contributing to pollution.

And it is not only contaminated crops, but there are environmental concerns that may persist for years.

In east China's Changzhou City, 500 students at Changzhou Foreign Languages School fell ill. The incident is still under investigation, and the case is being supervised directly by the State Council. One thing not in question is that their new school was built one street away from a polluted plot that was once home to three chemical plants.

OUT IN THE FIELDS

The action plan includes soil assessment as part of overall environmental assessments. To control heavy metal pollution, the allowed concentrations in industrial discharge will be cut by 10 percent of 2013 levels by 2020. By then, 1.3 million hectares of heavily polluted farmland will be returned into forest or grassland.

These targets are by no means easy to attain. Li Fasheng, a researcher with the Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences (CRAES), believes land should be classified by the pollutants involved.

"Industrial soil pollution includes heavy metals at the sites of iron and steel mills and tailings, organic chemical contamination near pesticide and petroleum plants and electronic waste, which should all be treated in different ways," he said.

While it is technically feasible to remove pollutants from soil, the cost of soil restoration is enormous and requires great care to prevent secondary pollution as in the Changzhou case.

Environmental expert Lan Hong with the People's University of China estimates that restoration costs a minimum of 90,000 yuan per hectare. Treating heavy mental contamination costs substantially more. This means that it will cost more than 140 billion yuan (21 billion U.S. dollars) to solve the problem.

The Ministry of Finance will allocate about 9.1 billion yuan this year to treat soil pollution, two and half times more than last year, but still a tiny fraction of what is needed.

GREEN SHOOTS

There is a lot to be learned from soil restoration that is already underway.

Huanjiang, a county in Guangxi well known for its nonferrous metal resources, was once home to heavily polluted soil until a clean-up began in 2010. The government spent 24.5 million yuan to try to eliminate heavy metals such as arsenic, lead and zinc. Lime powder was spread on the fields planted with crops like maize and sunflowers which concentrate arsenic. After more than a decade, more than 85 hectares of fields have been restored to normal, according to local authorities.

"Cleaning up our soil will be a long battle," said CRAES researcher Li.
 
This goes to show that it's a massive task to clean up the environment.
Hopefully, China will develop some innovative and profitable technologies along the way.
This crisis will also present an opportunity.


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China way off air pollution target in 2015: report
2016-06-03 09:27 | Xinhua | Editor: Mo Hong'e

Only 73 of 338 Chinese cities subject to air quality monitoring met the national standard for clean air in 2015, according to the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

It made the revelation on Thursday in its annual Environment Condition Communique.

Environmental authorities observed precipitation in 480 cities and detected acid rain in 22.5 percent of them last year, according to the communique.

They also conducted tests at 338 cities' drinking water sources, and found the water in nearly 3 percent of them was unfit for drinking.

There were also some improvements in 2015. For example, the number of deaths in floods dropped 76 percent from the previous year, while the number of residents affected by floods and the area affected by floods declined 46 percent and 45 percent respectively.

Forest coverage has reached 21.6 percent in China, with its total forested area ranking fifth in the world, according to the communique.
 
The burning question of household waste in China
2016-06-06 09:00 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

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Concerns about harmful emissions have resulted in construction being halted at a number of incineration plants around the country. Now, experts are claiming the country will drown under a deluge of garbage if the situation doesn't change soon.

China is facing a mountain of unprocessed household waste after public protests disrupted the construction of incineration facilities, and as landfill sites reach capacity, according to experts.

In 2014, 179 million metric tons of household waste was collected nationwide, according to data provided by the National Bureau of Statistics. Meanwhile, statements released by the central government say the volume of waste is expected to grow at between 7 and 10 percent every year in large cities, such as Beijing.

Public protests

On April 21, the government of Haiyan county in the eastern province of Zhejiang, announced that it was cancelling construction of a new waste incineration project in response to two days of public protests. However, it also released a statement calling for public support, saying the new plant was urgently needed to prevent a buildup of waste that could result in widespread pollution.

Residents of the county, which is administered by Hangzhou city, voiced concerns about the potential health risks from emissions via online forums and through direct representations to the government. Some protesters even blocked roads and attacked and injured a number of police officers and government officials.

Most of Haiyan's household waste used to be processed at incineration plants in other counties, but late last year the plants were so overloaded that the operators refused to burn waste from outside their own area, leaving Haiyan's landfill sites close to full.

"Without new facilities to deal with the waste, the county will soon see severe pollution from a flood of waste," the government's statement said.

The problem isn't just confined to Haiyan, though. Several areas of the country-including Beijing and the provinces of Guangdong and Hainan-have seen protests against new incineration plants, despite the ever-rising volume of waste as a result of urban expansion.

At present, the three main methods of disposing of household waste are landfill sites, incineration and composting.

However, experts say it's not feasible to bury such enormous amounts of waste in landfills-the most widely used method-partly because most of them are nearly full and partly because of a lack of land to build more.

Incineration has become the most popular treatment because the plants require less land than waste-burial sites, the materials are easy to deal with once burned and the incineration process generates heat and power.

Those advantages saw the number of incineration plants rise to 188 in 2014 from 104 in 2010, according to government data. Meanwhile, a survey conducted by the Power Generation Branch of the China Association of Circular Economy, an industry association in Beijing, estimated that the number of facilities has doubled in the past six years, reaching 225 by May.

In the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20), the central government has encouraged the construction of waste incineration plants to protect the environment. However, public opinion is divided. Some people have objected to the construction of new plants, even though they acknowledge the need for them-the "not in my backyard" syndrome-while others seem unfazed.

Guo Gaoyun, secretary-general of the Power Generation Branch, who has conducted research into incinerator operations for many years, said the key factors are the implementation of emissions standards, strict supervision and smooth, timely communications.

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"It's easy to set stringent standards, but it's never easy to implement them strictly," he said, adding that the public perception is that many plants fail to adhere to the standards and governments don't supervise them adequately.

An incineration plant run by China Everbright International has been operating in Jianhu, a village in Changzhou, Jiangsu, since 2008. It deals with waste from five large residential communities and villages scattered across the neighborhood, with a population of more than 100,000.

During the planning stage, a number of residents voiced concerns about possible pollution from the incinerator, said Liao Guoyong, the plant's deputy manager, who added that the city government invited local residents to visit the plant and get a clearer picture of its operations.

"Our plant is open to the public, giving people access to emissions data. We also hold quarterly meetings to answer any questions people may have," said Liao, during a welcoming address for a group of researchers from the All-China Environment Federation.

According to a survey conducted by the plant, 56.5 percent of respondents (mostly local residents) said their confidence in the facility had risen and they now support its work.

Liao said the plant has not received a single complaint about environmental damage or air pollution in the eight years since operations began.

However, Wu Yongxin, a senior engineer at an incineration plant in Ningbo city, Zhejiang, said it's not enough to release emissions-monitoring data, and it's far more important to maintain strict controls and adopt the best emissions-reduction technologies.

Public concerns about health risks and pollution caused by incineration have focused on dioxins, the malodorous gases and dust discharged during burning and wastewater from leachates (liquid that has percolated through a solid object and contains traces of the original material), Wu said.

Dioxins are highly toxic, persistent environmental pollutants that can cause cancers, result in reproductive and developmental problems, and also damage the immune system.

To control pollution, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development released tough guidelines-the Standard for Pollution Control on Municipal Solid Waste Incineration-on July 1, 2014.

The standard adheres to the strictest European standards, especially those related to the emission of dioxins.

"In addition, dioxin emissions from incinerators cannot be compared with the large amounts of dioxins emitted by chemical plants, which cause far more air pollution," said Yan Weifu, an engineer with Everbright's technology department.

Yan's opinion was echoed by a number of experts and officials.

Xu Haiyun, chief engineer at the China Urban Construction Design and Research Institute, said that if governments implemented the national standards rigorously, the volume of dioxins discharged would not pose a threat to people's health.

There were no indications of noxious gases or dust when China Daily visited plants in four cities in East China: Ningbo in Zhejiang-which is home to the largest number of incineration facilities in the country-plus Changzhou, Nanjing and Suqian, all in Jiangsu.

A better way to win public support for incineration projects would be for governments at all levels to strengthen supervision and communicate fully with the public, Xu said.

Lu Huangzhong, deputy head of the Suqian environmental protection bureau, told members of the Trans-Century Tour of Chinese Environmental Protection, an inspection team led by the national legislative branches on environmental protection, that all the monitoring data for the city's incineration plants goes online directly and the bureau also conducts regular field monitoring.

"The monitoring of incineration plants has and will always be a priority for the public and for environmental protection," Lu said.

Construction resumes

For the public to accept existing incineration plants, local governments will have to adopt the methods used in Suqian and strengthen supervision to ensure that emissions meet national standards, experts said.

Faced with the problem of a rapidly rising amount of household waste, many cities will have to improve communications with the public so that aborted incineration projects can be restarted, they added.

In 2013, more than 3,000 residents of Boluo, a village in Huizhou city, Guangdong, objected to the construction of an incineration plant, even though the government had already introduced stringent protective measures.

The village and city governments regularly demonstrated the measures they employed to protect drinking water, undertake regular monitoring and maintain employment levels. Eventually, the campaign overcame local objections, leading to construction being completed last year, and the start of a pilot operation, according to a statement released by the local government.

In Beijing, construction of the Asuwei Incineration Plant resumed at the end of 2014, after being suspending for five years because of opposition from local residents.

The resumption won public support after the municipal government promised strict supervision and supplementary facilities to reduce pollution. In addition, the residents were relocated.

After seeing the anti-pollution measures in the 2014 plan, Huang Yishan, who protested against the Asuwei plant in 2009, changed his opinion and is now confident the facility will not cause pollution.

A number of other stalled incineration projects will resume soon, despite objections, because they are urgently needed and their construction will boost economic growth.

"Governments should shoulder more responsibility for the situation and supervise operations to ensure they keep their promise to protect the environment and human health," said Guo, from the Power Generation Branch.
 
Xinjiang city razes chimneys for clean air
Xinhua, June 6, 2016

A city in northwest China's Xinjiang Region on Monday razed 20 chimneys belonging to 12 highly-polluting companies.

The shutdown of the outdated capacity in Fukang City of Changji Prefecture will cut industrial pollutants by 4,540 tonnes a year, said Wang Zhihua, Communist Party Chief of Fukang.

Wang said the city made the move despite economic pressure and was determined to have "regular blue sky."

Culture industry parks, clean energy projects and service sector firms will be established instead, according to the official.

"The cement subsidiary brought us wealth, but the environment is more important in the long term," said Huo Qiying, who has worked for Tianlong Mining Company for 29 years.

Zhao Xuehui, deputy director of Changji environmental protection administration, said authorities in the prefecture will dismantle 243 coal-burning boilers and shut down 13 polluting projects this year. This could help cut emission of sulfur dioxide by over 7,200 tonnes, he said.
 
China's Environment Ministry Reshuffles to Better Curb Water, Air, Soil Pollution
2016-06-13 20:01:25 Xinhua Web Editor: Fei Fei

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The screenshot shows the official announcement on the website of the Ministry of Environmental Protection. [Photo: CRIENGLISH.com]

Three new departments under the Ministry of Environmental Protection, dedicated to water, air and soil protection, are all set for operation after personnel reported for duty, the ministry announced Monday.

The three departments have been reorganized from two departments on pollution prevention and control, and pollution emission control, both of which have been dissolved.

The reshuffle will help the ministry better monitor and curb pollution in these three areas.

China released an action plan on soil pollution in May, in which the State Council vowed to curb soil pollution by 2020 and improve soil quality by 2030, completing the tasks outlined in action plans on environmental degradation issued by the central government.
 
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