BEIJING, July 4 (Xinhua) -- Chinese people's refusal
to accept an ever deteriorating environmental situation has resulted in a rising
number of "mass incidents", the country's chief environment official said on
Wednesday.
Zhou Shengxian, director of the State Environmental
Protection Administration (SEPA), did not give detailed figures or examples when
addressing a national environment meeting on Wednesday.
But Zhou did reveal that his agency received 1,814
petitions in the first five months of the year appealing for a better
environment, an 8 percent increase over the same period of last year.
"As people's living standards rise, they are focusing
more on the environment and on quality of life," said Zhou, acknowledging that
repeated environmental incidents have undermined public confidence.
Since May, blue-green algae outbreaks have been
reported in eastern Taihu Lake, Chaohu Lake and southwestern Dianchi Lake,
endangering local tap water supply.
The local government said on Wednesday water supplies
to 200,000 people in Shuyang county in east China's Jiangsu Province had been
halted for more than 40 hours after ammonia and azote polluted a local river.
An unending series of water pollution incidents has
prompted environmental officials to suddenly become very outspoken.
"In China the environment is facing extremely
difficult conditions," Zhou said.
Zhou also revealed that the administration would
treat the prevention of pollution in the main rivers and lakes as the priority
task in the last six months of the year.
"We will give all the polluted rivers and lakes a
rest," he said, admitting that northern China's Liaohe River and Haihe River had
been seriously contaminated.
There is still a possibility of a pollution outbreak
in Chaohu Lake, Dianchi Lake and drainage area of the Three Gorges offshoot, he
added.
Frequent water pollution incidents also increased the
Cabinet's concern, as a State Council executive meeting presided over by Premier
Wen Jiabao on Wednesday stressed the need to amend the existing law on handling
of water pollution, allowing for harsher punishment for illegal practices.
The growth of China's high energy-consuming and
polluting industries in the first five months of 2007 far exceeded that of the
national economy, "posing great difficulties for environmental protection," said
Zhou.
SEPA vice-director Pan Yue said on Tuesday that
"traditional ways of development have caused the near breakdown of China's
resources and environment and people's lives are in great danger."
Local authorities in six cities, two counties and
five industrial zones - all in the vicinity of the Yellow River, the Yangtze
River, the Huaihe River and the Haihe River - only have three months to fix
their "environmental problems", according to Pan.
He set in motion a plan to tackle water pollution in
China's four major rivers, mainly targeting illegal pollution
discharge.