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The transport industry is fighting legislation that would require drivers to switch off their engines while vehicles are stationary. Similarly, bus operators are resisting a proposal to fit buses with pollution control equipment, saying older buses do not have room for the device. Miriam Lau, the lawmaker who represents the transport industry, said the government needs to offer higher financial incentives to bus companies to switch to cleaner engines. "Environmentalists like to point the finger at us, saying we are stopping environmental bills from being passed. That is not the case, far from it. The transport sector wants to see a cleaner Hong Kong too," she said. "But any environmental bill that is passed needs to be ... reasonable for transport businesses and environmental groups." James Seymour, a senior research fellow at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said that many of the business interests represented in the legislature benefit financially from weak environmental regulation. Other groups such as environmentalists, human rights advocates, bicyclists and mass transit riders don't have designated seats. "This goes a long way in explaining why the environment is given such short shrift in Hong Kong," he said. Change seems unlikely anytime soon in what has long been a business-friendly city. Philip Wong, who represents the commercial sector in the legislature, said the political system gives voice to groups that help drive the economy. "The commercial sector is particularly crucial to the Hong Kong economy," he said. "We give many people jobs. We also inject a practical, economic perspective to things. ... Other legislators cannot do that."
[Associated
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