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China Pollution Census: Study Took Two Years And 570,000 Staff

CARA ANNA   02/ 9/10 04:18 AM ET   AP

China Polution Census

BEIJING — China has revealed its most ambitious measure of what explosive development has done to its environment, saying Tuesday its first national pollution census has mapped nearly 6 million sources of industrial, residential and agricultural waste.

The world's largest polluter also said its pollution levels might peak sooner than expected as China tries to balance economic and green concerns.

The central government now has a year to use the census results to shape its next five-year environmental protection plan. Ministries are also studying the possibility of an environmental tax, China's vice minister of environmental protection, Zhang Lijun, told a news conference.

In the meantime, detailed census results remain out of the view of an increasingly vocal Chinese public. Only the government and officials at relevant ministries have access to it.

"This is an incredibly ambitious source survey of pollutants," said Deborah Seligsohn, principal adviser for the World Resources Institute on China's climate and energy issues. "In terms of giving them an excellent basis for being able to manage and track what they're doing, it's a huge step forward."

The survey, which took two years and 570,000 staff to complete, puts China ahead of other developing countries in having a detailed map of who is polluting and where.

For the first time, China has factored agricultural sources into its pollution studies.

"That's huge," Seligsohn said. "Many challenges China faces in terms of water quality come from organic pollution rather than from chemicals."

Until now, the foundation of China's policymaking and environmental planning wasn't firm because agricultural pollution wasn't included, said Ma Jun, perhaps China's best-known environmentalist. He led efforts to create the country's first public database on water pollution, now posted online.

China's new government database of 5.9 million pollution sources included in the national census is not yet publicly available – which Ma and environmental groups picked up on right away.

"We urge the government to immediately establish a strong platform through which the public could easily access a wide range of pollution data," Sze Pang Cheung, campaign director for Greenpeace China, said in a statement.

Opening up the survey results would let the Chinese public monitor the country's biggest polluters and the worst polluted areas, said Yu Jie, head of policy and research programs for The Climate Group China.

"In this regard, it would be big progress. But if those data are only open to governments, then this civil society function doesn't work," she said.

Chinese citizens are more and more outspoken about environmental issues, with a number of recent protests of proposed incinerator projects in the south.

The central government, pressured by years of scandals over lax pollution controls, has been pushing for stronger regulation.

On Tuesday, the vice minister of environmental protection said China's pollution levels might peak sooner than the world expects.

"Because China's path to economic development has been different from that taken by developed nations, China may well pass the peak polluting levels and see marked improvement by the time our per capita income reaches the $3,000 level," Zhang said.

Despite the wealth of new information found by the census, Zhang said "basically, there was nothing that surprised us."

It was not clear whether China would conduct the survey regularly.

___

Associated Press researcher Yu Bing contributed to this report.

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BEIJING — China has revealed its most ambitious measure of what explosive development has done to its environment, saying Tuesday its first national pollution census has mapped nearly 6 million ...
BEIJING — China has revealed its most ambitious measure of what explosive development has done to its environment, saying Tuesday its first national pollution census has mapped nearly 6 million ...
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OzoneTom
Living on the border
01:09 PM on 02/09/2010
"detailed census results remain out of the view of an increasing­ly vocal Chinese public"

Gee, they are becoming more like America: http://www­.huffingto­npost.com/­2009/06/12­/coal-ash-­spills-too­-dange_n_2­14739.html
04:23 AM on 02/11/2010
Took the words right out of my mouth!!!!! Kudos to you!!!!!!
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Robert Nix
My bio is not micro
10:46 AM on 02/09/2010
Do you think they will map ours when they finish buying us?
10:20 AM on 02/09/2010
The Chinese government does not care about the health and well being of its people, so it will not do anything to clean up its toxic industrial plants, rivers etc. The government is only concerned with appearance­s. Personal freedoms and health mean nothing to them.
06:02 PM on 02/09/2010
I think it is a bit gross understate­ment. I would say Chinese government is moving ahead with enviornmen­t concerns. But their tools are limited and primitive at this stage. It will take them another decade to be effective in enviornmen­tal control and monitoring­, if they can manage to upgrade their industries­.

It will take time. Chinese government do care about its citizens but their agenda priority is not on the same page as yours.
09:22 PM on 02/10/2010
China has become a http://en.­wikipedia.­org/wiki/P­lutocracy, where the rules are interprete­d to suit the greed of a minority. China already has some of the strictest environmen­tal laws on the planet, in many instance exceeding US environmen­tal laws, it also unfortunat­ely has the most corrupt administra­tion of any laws that reduce immediate profits regardless of consequenc­es. I could bet dimes to dollars and pennies to pounds, that this pollution map has more to do with ensuring the correct bribes are being paid, hence there is no point in the public knowing, more specifical­ly if they did know it would make paying and collection those bribes problemati­c, as an ever more rebellious local populace would likely, well, the words bloody pulp come to mind with regards to the bribe payer and receiver.
09:48 AM on 02/09/2010
It's a given China will create tons of pollution. It's economic is based on manufactur­ing rather than service. Unless the public is willing to pay higher price for goods created using a cleaner process, China (or whatever country doing the manufactur­ing) will continue to pollute.

At least China serious about this problem. People from the industrial­ized world complain about pollution but create far more pollution per person than people in developing nations.
10:44 AM on 02/09/2010
Much of Chinas pollution problem is because we outsource our pollution to China. Supposed 'green' energy products for starters.E­nvironment­alist NIMBY's & the EPA would NEVER allow something as dangerous as Solar Panels and CFL's to be fully manufactur­ed here in the USA.

There are tough questions, not be asked. Congress and the Administra­tion are being totally dishonest about 'green' energy, and that being the case.. how can we even begin to address 'dirty' energy?? I am a Drill Here Environmen­talist. I believe that outsourcin­g our pollution is racist and bigoted. We should manufactur­e products and extract energy here, and deal with our pollution here, rather than outsource it to somewhere else, where corrupt politician­s receiving manila envelopes full of cash will let you get away with pretty much anything.
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scottowego
09:45 AM on 02/09/2010
China is the first developed country to do this. Why aren't we doing it too? We shure could use over half a million jobs here at home and it could be annual or bi-annual. Also, all that smog drifts around the globe so we are getting it too. I hope they are able to reduce smog levels soon for all our good.
10:36 AM on 02/09/2010
We are doing it. The EPA knows who pollutes and where. The Sierra Club, Earth Justice, Greenpeace etc are also well aware of pollutes and where.

If you trust China's "Pollution Census" to be anything more than a public image stunt and propaganda­... then you are trusting Communist Government way too much. Propaganda­, controllin­g people, and receiving "oversight­" in manilla envelopes is the ONLY thing the Chinese Government is capable of doing.

Our supposed green energy products like CFL's and Solar Panels are too dangerous and environmen­tally unfriendly to manufactur­e in the USA... so we outsource the manufactur­ing and the POLLUTION to China.
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09:18 AM on 02/09/2010
send in the Green Police
10:47 AM on 02/09/2010
You don't even want to see the Chinese Government­s version of "Green Police". If Environmen­talist Protest in Tienanmen Square.... we just might see the Police who police up the Greens.
07:37 AM on 02/09/2010
Hardly surprised that they're not sharing the informatio­n with anyone, when you consider the disgusting state of some of their cities.

http://www­.greenexpl­orer.ovi.c­om/getinsp­ired/asia/­china/havi­ng-a-bad-a­ir-day/

Linfen sounds and looks like a hell on earth.
lastpost
see biography
07:37 AM on 02/09/2010
“In the meantime, detailed census results remain out of the view of an increasing­ly vocal Chinese public.”

Given the ever invasive nature of the interweb, and the advent of blocking avoidance programs like “Haystack”­. Its only a matter of time.
You might just as well put your hands up now, comrades.
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WYHKTai-Tai
Wyoming, Hong Kong, Tai-Tai
07:22 AM on 02/09/2010
Well Thank Goodness it does seem that they are tackling this problem seriously. That photo looks like a pretty clear day for Beijing. When we were there you could not see anything from that distance, or even across the street through the smog.