Special Report:
NPC, CPPCC Annual
Sessions 2008
BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China will check provincial-level
governments' performances in conserving energy and reducing pollutant emissions,
and the results, to be taken as a major index for administration evaluation,
will be publicized in May or June, a senior official said Tuesday.
About 1,000 key enterprises are also put under the scrutiny, whose
performances will be examined by provincial-level governments, said Xie Zhenhua,
vice minister in charge of the National Development and Reform Commission
(NDRC), at a press conference held on the sidelines of the ongoing parliament
annual session.
The provincial-level governments are required to publicize the results of
their checkups on enterprises in March, Xie said.
Those who miss the annual goals in energy conservation and emission
reduction, either governments or enterprises, will be required to make
explanations and take measures for improvement within a set time.
They will also be denied any honor or award, and the approval of new high
energy-consuming projects in the province or of the enterprise will be
suspended, Xie said.
The checkup results will be delivered to the Organization Department of the
Communist Party of China Central Committee, which is responsible for official
evaluation and promotion, and the State-owned Assets Supervision and
Administration Commission of the State Council, a regulator of state-owned
enterprises.
The State Council last November promulgated measures to monitor and check
annually the performances of 31 provincial-level governments and 1,000 key
enterprises in saving energy and cutting emissions.
Before that, the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA)
signed a letter of responsibility for cutting sulfur dioxide and chemical oxygen
demand (COD) with the provincial-level governments and five power companies in
2006.
China reported, historically, a drop of both sulfur dioxide emission and
COD in 2007.
However, Deputy Director Zhang Lijun of the SEPA admitted that it is not
easy to hit the target to cut China's total energy consumption by about 20
percent and the emission of major pollutants by 10 percent by the year 2010, a
goal the government set in 2006.
"I should say it's still a rather arduous task and the situation is grave,"
Zhang told reporters at the press conference.
The central government, nevertheless, is confident to reach the goal, he
said, citing the 10 measures Premier Wen Jiabao announced in his government work
report last Wednesday.
The measures for energy conservation and emission reduction, including
scrapping outdated production capacity in electricity, steel, cement, coal and
paper-making industries, are "extremely practical," he said.
As for the effort to respond to global climate change, NDRC's Xie Zhenhua
said that as a responsible government, the Chinese government will definitely
take effective measures and are always ready to cooperate with all countries
across the world.