BEIJING, March 12 -- Just a few years ago
environmental reporters were generally placed in the same class as prophets of
doom, and their stories about how pollution would destroy humanity and the earth
were treated as mean sensationalism.
I believe that for the most part society has moved on
since then, but then just a few days ago I was confronted with some
old-fashioned thinking.
Before the two sessions started, one of my senior
editors told me that although I had done a lot of work reporting on stories
about the environment, many people tended not to pay attention to environmental
issues that is, right up until they get hit by a sandstorm or have their water
cut off because of a chemical spill.
His point was that we have to look for human angles
when reporting, but I have to confess that his words upset me a little. And so
with the question of whether or not the public cares about environmental
problems hanging over my head, I prepared to cover the two sessions for the
first time in my career.
What relief I felt when I entered the Great Hall of
the People on the opening day of the NPC.
My concerns and nervousness evaporated amid the
heated discussions between the NPC deputies and CPPCC members on questions of
protecting the environment.
Delegates proposed motions calling for legislation to
create a circular economy, prevent soil pollution or pave the way for the
recycling and reuse of electric waste. CPPCC members proposed that the
government take up the problem of air pollution in the area of Pearl River Delta
and a relocation plan for heavy industries along the Yangtze River, and so on.
Even Gong Li, the world famous actress and a CPPCC
member, put forward a proposal on the environment this year, showing the wisdom
behind her gorgeous looks.
Protecting the environment was one of the highlighted
topics in Premier Wen's government work report, placing it on the same level as
GDP (gross domestic products) growth, rural issues, healthcare and education.
Words like emissions reductions, energy saving and
climate change were on everyone's lips in the conference hall.
I started to get the feeling that the environment was
not something that only the central government, environmentalists and
environmental reporters cared about.
Common people from many different backgrounds share a
common goal - protecting the place we call home. The public has shaken off its
slumber and is aware that extreme climate events, pollution tragedies and animal
extinctions are not just the stuff of science fiction anymore. They could be the
legacy of the irresponsible way we have treated the earth.
Following some very fruitful interviews with the
gathered delegates and members, I left the Great Hall of the People and found
that Beijing's ever-gloomy sky had suddenly cleared, leaving uncluttered blue
vistas as far as the eye could see.
(Source: China Daily)