CANBERRA, July 19 (Xinhua) -- Australian newspaper
"The Sydney Morning Herald" Saturday praised the Chinese government's
efforts to reduce pollution and urged Western countries to provide help to
tackle the global problem.
The article in the paper, entitled "A Light in the
Fog" said, according to the World Bank and Chinese environmental authorities,
the Chinese government "is treating the problem seriously and the air in most
Chinese cities is getting cleaner. By modern Beijing standards, next month's
Olympic Games is likely to be a clean-air event."
It said farmers have been banned from burning wheat
stalks across most of northern China. Diesel trucks have been pulled off the
roads, hundreds of steel mills in surrounding provinces have been closed for the
summer. Some improvements will continue after the Olympics.
The article noted that one difference between China
now and the air pollution problems of the United States and Europe in the past
is that those countries did not seriously tackle environmental issues until they
were already rich.
"China is at a much lower level of per capita income
today than those countries were in the 1960s, and yet it has already begun
serious efforts to reduce water and air pollution and to improve energy
efficiency," the paper quoted David Dollar, the World Bank's China director, as
saying.
The paper quoted Yu Jianhua, director of Beijing's
air quality monitoring center, as saying his government is trying to catch
up with Western countries. "Over 50 years they have made their air quality
good enough," he says. "We started late. We've only had 10 years."
Of late, China's progress in improving the air has
been clouded by a suspicion that it has been massaging its figures.
Almost half of China's pollution-related deaths are
related to indoor air pollution, typically caused by unsafe coal stoves. But
China is moving to fix the problem at a much earlier stage of development.
It has already installed more efficient coal stoves
in nearly 200 million households over two decades - that is as much as providing
nine stoves for every Australian. And now they are starting to replace them all
again.
The article also pointed out that China is also
shutting down inefficient factories. It is reducing energy intensity by 20
percent over five years. And it is beginning to judge chief executives and
government officials against energy and pollution targets. Two provincial
governors recently pledged to resign if they did not meet environmental targets.
It is a radical departure from policies that rewarded economic growth at all
cost.
"In all of these endeavors the government is
explicitly targeting health, environmental amenity and energy security. In most
cases, reducing carbon emissions is a beneficial accident," it added.
The article concluded by quoted a Chinese professor
as saying that "If the rest of the world does not provide help to China right
now, then what the rest of the developed world does from now on is
insignificant," as climate change is a global issue, not a Chinese
issue.
China's environment ministry adds 2 more departments to fight pollution
BEIJING, July 11 (Xinhua) -- China's Ministry of Environmental Protection will set up two supervision and monitoring departments, as part of its efforts to step up pollution fighting. Full story