BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China's environment watchdog has called off a
controversial waste-fueled power plant in Beijing until further environment
impact study is done and subject to public scrutiny.
The Liulitun project in the northwest of the Chinese capital must go
through further feasibility study by experts and public scrutiny on a larger
scale, said Zhu Xingxiang, head of the pollution prevention division under the
Ministry of Environmental Protection said on the sidelines of the parliament's
annual full session.
The process of expert assessment and results of the public examination must
be submitted to the Beijing municipal bureau of environmental protection for
approval, he said.
The bureau then must inform the public if it choose to approve the project,
said Zhu at a press conference.
"The project must not start without informing the public first," he said.
The proposal of building a waste-fueled power plant unveiled in March 2007
aroused wrath and frustration of residents living nearby.
As one of the four scheduled plants of its kind in Beijing, the project
with an investment of eight million yuan (1.17 million U.S. dollars) is expected
to burn 1,200 tonnes of waste every day.
Residents in the neighborhood of the dump are worried about discharges from
the plant and pollution to the underground water, and they also feared such a
plant would kill their hope of closing the waste dump after living with the
dump's stench for 10 years.
The power plant project was suspended by Beijing's environmental
administration following protests from residents, saying it had to do more
research on the environmental impact and solicit and consider the opinions of
locals.
Yet, suspension of such projects had left the local government unsolved
with growing pressure of waste disposal problem when dumps are getting filled up
in the city.
This is a growing dilemma faced by Beijing and other Chinese cities alike.
Vice Minister Wu Xiaoqing said Wednesday at the same joint media interview
that technologies of waste-fueled power plants and waste incineration have been
used in other countries for 30 to 40 years, and such technologies could be
employed in waste disposal in China.
Wu said the ministry is working on the management of discharges of dioxides
from such power plants.
However, he stressed that environmental interests of the public should be
firmly safeguarded in these endeavors.