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Making blue skies over Jing-Jin-Ji last

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2016-06-21 11:28China Daily Editor: Xu Shanshan
The CCTV headquarters is shrouded in heavy smog in the central business district in Beijing, China Dec 7, 2015.(Photo/Xinhua)

The CCTV headquarters is shrouded in heavy smog in the central business district in Beijing, China Dec 7, 2015.(Photo/Xinhua)

We believe it is fair to say some of the Chinese government's more stringent standards issued at the national level and tightened in key provinces have indeed started to have some impact. Now, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region (or Jing-Jin-Ji, as it is referred to in China) has high targets for air, water and soil quality.

The amended air pollution prevention and control law became effective on Jan 1, 2016. China also updated the national environment law last year, laying the foundations for better information disclosure on environmental issues and giving citizens greater say on their environment. So there is good reason to believe air pollution in Jing-Jin-Ji is better controlled than before.

For China to effectively address air pollution, and to ensure there are lasting blue skies over Jing-Jin-Ji, we would like to emphasize five points.

First, it is essential that investments to counter air pollution are accurately targeted for maximum impact. Sound scientific and cost-benefit analysis will help ensure this. For example, while the energy and industrial sectors are clearly the most significant sources of air pollution, seasonal stalk burning and residential coal burning-for heating and cooking-around Beijing and in Hebei province are estimated to contribute at least 29 percent of harmful particulates in the air. They also produce as much harmful sulfur dioxide as all the coal-fired power plants in Jing-Jin-Ji. Under the policy action developed with the Asian Development Bank, Hebei is committed to investing in a monitoring system, which has been the missing link in undertaking a comprehensive analysis.

Second, there should be regional planning and better coordination of actions in pollution control, monitoring and enforcement. Air pollution in Jing-Jin-Ji is caused by pollutants transported within that region. Unified air quality standards and coordinated control measures and strategies would improve regional air quality, as has happened in Europe.

Third, the government should actively consider economic measures to cut down on consumption of resources as well as reduce pollution. These could include a natural resource tax on coal and other resources, and a gradual increase in tax rates. It also needs to pilot emission taxes on major pollutants such as sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide in selected areas.

In Beijing, higher fuel tax rates would help address the proliferation of motor vehicles and reliance on oil imports. Cities with seriously clogged roads can introduce "congestion taxes" to reduce traffic jams and cut vehicle emissions at the same time. It is also important to adjust the emission tax rates to provide proper incentives for enterprises to abate pollution.

Fourth, for environmental authorities to grant emission permits, industry should be required to adopt the best available clean technology. It is also important to ensure that factories actually use such technology appropriately. Improvements in air quality are critically dependent on proper supervision and assurance that emitters comply with regulatory requirements. The current permit system in China lacks a firm legal basis as well as enforceable rules. It also lacks requirements for data and information to be provided by enterprises, which are essential for supervision and enforcement.

And fifth, the new Environmental Protection Law should be strictly and effectively enforced. Public access to the legal system on environmental issues would be enhanced if environmental courts were strengthened and the legal rights of citizens clarified. There should also be appropriate penalties and sanctions to give enterprises incentive to comply with the law. And the local environmental protection bureaus should be empowered with clear authority to impose penalties.

The ADB loan to Hebei made policymakers in province commit to air quality control, while enhancing the provincial environmental protection bureau's enforcement capacity.

Recent blue skies over Beijing bode well for China's journey toward an "ecological civilization", a stated ambition of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20). China, and the wider international community, will breathe easier if there is tangible progress.

The author, Ayumi Konishi, is director general for East Asia at the Asian Development Bank.

  

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