China pollution crisis undermining growth-official
HONG KONG, Dec 2 (Reuters) - China faces an environmental crisis that
threatens to wipe out much of the gains of three decades of economic
growth, one of China's most outspoken environment officials said in
comments published on Saturday.
"China is dangerously near a crisis. The country's enormous
environmental debt will have to be paid one way or another," Pan Yue,
deputy head of China's State Environmental Protection Administration,
said in a letter to the South China Morning Post. "(We must)
begin paying this debt now ... rather than allowing it to accumulate
and, ultimately, threaten to bankrupt us all," he added. Beijing
has admitted to some of the environmental degradation caused by three
decades of pursuing rapid economic growth at almost any cost, but the
picture it painted was still incomplete and China needed action, not
rhetoric, Pan said. Realistic estimates put environmental damage
at 8 to 13 percent of China's national income each year, meaning the
cost of pollution off-set almost all of China's economic gains since
the late 1970s, he said. The costs of pollution are being borne by ordinary Chinese. "Scarcely anyone bothers to consider the environmental costs to -- or rights of -- the country's poor and powerless," Pan said.
A quarter of the population drink substandard water, a third of
urbanites breathe badly polluted air and China has a major water
pollution incident every two days on average, he added. Pan urged the government to introduce legal mechanisms to make polluters pay and reward those who protect the environment.
He also called on Beijing to help unify the environmental watchdogs
scattered across different sectors, and establish a system to monitor
officials' performance in environmental as well as economic fields
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