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The Thirsty Dragon: Cleaning Up Its Water Act

Via Circle of Blue, an interesting look at China’s key pollution events, protests, and policy reforms from the last eight years at both the national and regional levels as China tries to clean up its water act:

While the Chinese government has made great strides in pushing investment and innovation in a cleaner economy, promoting political reforms for water protection has not risen to the same priority, due in part to bureaucratic turf battles and the weak enforcement power of local environmental protection bureaus. For instance, Chinese policymakers have revised the water pollution control law three times since 1984, yet quality has worsened.

graphic infographic data timeline facts China water pollution policy law protest 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Infographic © Mark Townsend /Circle of Blue and Katelin Carter / BSU
Click image to open the interactive infographic, compiled by Circle of Blue and the China Environment Forum. The timeline details China’s major policies, reports, databases, and pollution protests during the last eight years.

Despite improvements in municipal wastewater-treatment rates during the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010), water quality has not improved considerably. This is largely because of agricultural runoff and animal waste from China’s burgeoning factory-farm sector, responsible for 57 percent of nitrogen discharge, about two-thirds of phosphorus discharge, and more than 43 percent of the chemical oxygen demand (COD), according to a 2011 pollution census.

Furthermore, approximately 40 percent of the nation’s major rivers are so polluted that they can only be used for industry or landscaping, according to a 2010 environmental assessment survey by China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection.

Protests over water pollution accidents in China are now occurring with such frequency, say China specialists and environmental advocates, that they signal an awakening of the public conscience about the environment. In 2009, China had nearly 90,000 “mass incidents” (protests involving more than 100 people), thousands of which were over environmental concerns, according to a recent study by Nankai University. The graphic above chronicles the plight of China’s protesters and policy makers during the last eight years.



This entry was posted on Saturday, October 8th, 2011 at 8:15 am and is filed under China.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

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