China
to ban water-polluting paper mills, oil refineries
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[April 16, 2015]
By Kathy Chen and Dominique Patton
BEIJING (Reuters) - China will ban
water-polluting paper mills, oil refineries, pesticide producers and
other industrial plants by the end of 2016, as it moves to tackle severe
pollution of the country's water supply.
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The long-awaited plan comes as the central government steps up its
"war on pollution" after years of industrial development that have
left one-third of China's major river basins and 60 percent of its
underground water contaminated.
Growing public discontent over the environmental degradation has led
to increasing scrutiny of industrial polluters. China's largest
energy company China National Petroleum Corporation [CNPET.UL] last
month agreed to pay 100 million yuan ($16 million) in compensation
after it was accused of leaking benzene into the water system in
Lanzhou in northwest China.
But experts say much more needs to be done to protect China's scarce
water resources.
"Water is the bottleneck to China's industrial development. Coal
miners and factories located in western regions are suffering from
water shortage, and if their discharge of dirty waste water is not
treated, the pressure will increase," said Alex Zhang, president of
McWong Environmental Technology, a United States-based water
technology company.
The new plan - published by the State Council, China's cabinet -
aims to raise the share of good quality water, ranked at national
standard three or above, to more than 70 percent in the seven major
river basins, and to more than 93 percent in the urban drinking
water supply by 2020.
Impact on water will become a key consideration in future industrial
expansion, said the cabinet, adding that it will restrict building
of petrochemical and metal smelting factories along major river
basins.
"We will fully consider the capacity of our water resources and
environment, and determine city planning, project location,
population and industrial output according to water reserves," it
said.
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China currently controls water usage by allocating volume permits to
each province, and requests for additional water for new projects
will be refused in regions already exceeding their allocated quotas,
said the cabinet.
The government is targeting a cap on overall water consumption at
670 billion cubic meters by 2020, and wants to cut agricultural
water use by more than 3.7 billion cubic meters by improving
irrigation efficiency by 2018.
Tiered pricing for residential water users will be rolled out
nationwide this year to encourage conservation. Non-residential
users will be charged progressive fees for overshooting quotas under
a plan to enter into force by 2020.
(Additional reporting by Chen Aizhu; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and
Tom Hogue)
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