BEIJING, April 25 (Xinhua) -- China's environmental
departments and polluters will have to publicize information regarding
environmental degradation and pollution, according to a draft measure issued by
the country's environment watchdog on Wednesday.
"Environmental departments at all levels are required
to make public 17 categories of environmental information including laws,
regulations, policies and standards regarding environmental protection," said
the draft issued by the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA).
The measure, which does not become effective until
May 1, 2008,comes shortly after the release of a decree on Tuesday by the State
Council to boost official transparency by ordering government departments to be
more open in reporting information.
Companies or factories exceeding pollution levels and
whose facilities are not up to environmental standards will have to report this
information, it says.
The draft measure asks governments to release
environmental information within 20 working days and in a way that ensures the
majority of the public have access to it. They must reply to any request for
information from a member of public within 15 days.
"Polluting companies have to publish information
concerning the discharge of main pollutants in local media within 30 days after
local environmental departments draw up company blacklists," the regulation
says.
The number of pollution-related lawsuits is rising by
about 30 percent every year and the environment is one of the main factors
triggering social conflicts.
Pan Yue, vice director of the SEPA, said China's
current environmental regulations lack specific terms on "information
transparency", which prevents the public from participating in environmental
protection.
"The public's right to know, to participate and to
supervise should be fully considered in environmental protection. Massive public
participation is needed," Pan said.
"People should participate more than planting trees
or cleaning rubbish. They should join the policy-making," he said, adding that
this could only happen if relevant departments and enterprises published their
environmental information.
Since February last year, SEPA called a halt to 43
projects with a total investment of 160 billion yuan (20.5 billion U.S. dollars)
because the public was dissatisfied with the impact of the projects on the local
environment.