999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

污染:數據是真實的嗎?

2015-03-20 02:20:40中國水危機
凈水技術 2015年1期
關鍵詞:改革

Pollution data discrepancies and inconsistencies

The 2011 Coastal Environmental Quality Report made public recently states that 7 823 t of lead were carried by China's rivers to the sea. However,according to the MEP,the total direct discharge of lead into the sea along the coast in the same year was only 3 t whilst only 155 t apparently were discharged into wastewater (primarily by industry). So where did the other 7 700 t of lead in China's rivers come from?

Since discharge of lead into the sea and wastewater are measured at discharge points,can we assume that the unaccounted for 7 700 t include a mix of natural emissions and illegal discharge? Since natural emissions are not in this ball park,this huge gap is likely due to illegal discharge.

An official MEP“unofficial illegal & unmonitored discharge”estimate?

All the above numbers are “official” MEP statistics. So can we assume this discrepancy to be the“official”“unofficial illegal & unmonitored discharge”estimate?If so,is the state of environment far worse than reported?

More importantly,are target reduction yardsticks in the 12FYP based on discharge measured at discharge points then going to put a dent in China's rampant pollution?Is this the right benchmark to use?As Dr.Tan Qiaoguo says in his article on coastal heavy metal pollution,direct discharge to the sea has been falling whilst the amounts from upstream pollution carried via the rivers to the sea has been increasing. There are obviously more questions than answers at this point.

Regardless,a 7 700 t gap is embarrassingly large and shines the spotlight at monitoring efforts to date,which can be at best described as“turn a blind eye”.

“The key issues are still monitoring and how to force companies to treat their wastewater properly before discharging”says an industrial wastewater treatment company engineer. He also confirms that factories often do not use treatment facilities except on the day of inspection. As a result,pollution levels monitored at the centralized wastewater treatment facility sometimes do not match with the level inspected/reported at the company's discharge point.

Last month,China Daily reported that China's Supreme People's Procuratorate, the country's top prosecuting body is getting tougher with officials who help in cover-ups.

國有農場辦社會職能改革和農墾國有土地使用權確權登記發證任務基本完成。全國35個墾區中,21個墾區已全面完成國有農場辦社會職能改革。全國農墾國有農場中已完成辦社會職能改革任務的超過80%。公檢法、基礎教育機構、基本醫療和公共衛生機構等三項改革任務已基本完成。農墾國有土地確權率、發證率基本達到預期目標。

Li Zhongcheng, deputy director under the procuratorate's malfeasance and infringement investigation department said“To protect the economy and obtain a good GDP performance,some local governments and law enforcement officers have covered up crimes or reduced punishments”.

The procuratorate estimate that the official dereliction of duty and malpractice in ecological and environmental protection has caused 25 deaths,12 injuries and RMB 3. 1 billion (USD 498 million)in economic losses in 2013.

Weak laws,low penalties,collusion with EIA assessors and mismatched discharge standards set to ensure polluters benefit have all hampered monitoring.Ministry structure, with dispersed monitoring responsibility spread among several ministries,also has not helped. All need to be tackled together — a mammoth task indeed but at least we now have an idea with an official unofficial number.

Or at least we think we do ....

MEP vs SOA:MEP data says 4x more lead carried by rivers to the sea

Under China's Marine Environmental Protection Law (1999),the monitoring responsibility of coastal environment including river mouths is shared by the MEP and the State Oceanic Administration (SOA).The SOA also published an annual report on oceanic environmental quality that includes data on coastal pollution based on monitored pollutants carried by 72 key rivers to the sea.

When we compare the two reports (the latest SOA report is 2013,but the 2011 report is used for the sake of comparison),there are discrepancies galore:

So which Ministry's data portrays the“real picture”?

The differences are likely due to different monitoring points, measurement frequency and methodology.Currently,neither the MEP nor SOA are fully transparent about their monitoring methods or sampling sizes,making it difficult to compare the data sets. So it's not just whether or not discharge is monitored but the monitoring methodology is also questionable.

Surely neither body is doing a good job when 1 600 ~7 700 t of lead are unaccounted for. Perhaps the failure to do so is systemic?

Source:CWR,MEP Coastal Environmental Qualilty Report 2011 (except for Chromium 2010),SOA State of the Oceanic Emironment Report 2011

Under the current system,the SOA only regulates pollution sources along the coast and in the sea,and has no control over the upstream rivers;while local environmental authorities under the MEP only supervise sections of the river that fall within their jurisdiction and have no say over the upstream sections of the same river,which may cross counties and provinces.

Maybe there needs to be regulations and incentive structures to ensure local authorities work together to ensure the health of the whole river?Otherwise heavy metal carried by trans-provincial rivers to the sea will persist.

As early as 2010,the MEP and SOA signed an agreement to collaborate on marine environment protection,including strengthening the monitoring of pollution discharge from the coastal regions as well as promoting bilateral communications and sharing of data& technologies. Clearly,we are still far from a cohesive and consistent monitoring system on pollution.

Aside from not knowing which set of data is real,we are also frustrated by yardsticks & definitions that change year-on-year making it impossible to identify trends. MEP's latest 2013 State of Environment Report is case and point — more on incomparable data on China's key lakes and reservoirs here.

Guesstimates of the “real picture ” from irreconcilable official data

Worryingly, regardless of which ministry is correct,these amounts of heavy metal in China's rivers carried to the sea are much greater than that measured at discharge points:

“Guesstimate Ranges”of the Real State of Pollution (tonnes)

Yes,the “real state” of pollution could be significantly worse.

The right to know the“real state”of pollution

There is no doubt that the Chinese people are now more concerned about the environment than before.They want to know how safe their water and food are.More than 117 million social media posts mentioning“pollution”on Weibo is testament to this rising concern.However,obtaining pollution data in China is still tough,both for public interest and academic research.

Although there have been efforts to improve information disclosure at the national level,transparency is still lacking at the local level.

With the“right to obtain environmental information”now enshrined in the new Environmental Protection Law,transparency hopefully will improve and inconsistencies highlighted here will eventually be ironed out.

Until then,the real state of the environment in China remains like the smog lingering over many cities in this country:worrying&unclear. The overall condition is bad but if these official-unofficial estimates are correct then the situation is a lot worse than we thought.

(本文的紙媒出版與網絡傳播由China Water Risk 授權《凈水技術》雜志社發布,未獲得China Water Risk 授權,第三方媒體不得轉載)

ABOUT CHINA WATER RISK

China Water Risk(CWR ) is a nonprofit initiative dedicated to addressing business & environmental risk arising from China's urgent water crisis. We aim to foster efficient and responsible use of China's water resources by engaging the global business and investment communities. As such we facilitate discussion amongst industry leaders,investors,experts & scientists on understanding & managing water risk across six industry sectors:Agriculture,Power,Mining,Food &Beverage,Textiles and Electronics. CWR has also been commissioned by financial institutions to conduct research analyzing the impact of water risks on the Power,Mining and Agricultural sectors. These reports have been considered groundbreaking and instrumental to understanding China's water-energy-food nexus. Join the discussion at www.chinawaterrisk.org.

猜你喜歡
改革
不是改革的改革
中國外匯(2019年17期)2019-11-16 09:31:02
改革之路
金橋(2019年10期)2019-08-13 07:15:20
個稅改革,你的稅后收入會增加嗎
中國外匯(2019年7期)2019-07-13 05:45:00
改革備忘
改革備忘
改革備忘
改革備忘
改革備忘
改革備忘
改革備忘
主站蜘蛛池模板: 久久人搡人人玩人妻精品| 四虎成人免费毛片| 狠狠色丁香婷婷| 福利片91| 韩国v欧美v亚洲v日本v| 在线无码九区| 亚洲精品国产精品乱码不卞| 国产福利观看| 色偷偷一区| 久久精品人人做人人| 视频二区中文无码| 久热99这里只有精品视频6| 99视频精品全国免费品| 国产成人综合日韩精品无码首页| 欧美视频在线第一页| 国产精品嫩草影院av| 亚洲小视频网站| 欧美a在线视频| 国产91全国探花系列在线播放| 国内嫩模私拍精品视频| 国产精品密蕾丝视频| 在线欧美日韩国产| 欧美国产另类| 精品无码视频在线观看| 国产一级妓女av网站| 老司国产精品视频| 欧美国产成人在线| 理论片一区| 伦精品一区二区三区视频| 九色91在线视频| 国产日韩丝袜一二三区| 欧美日韩中文国产| 日韩欧美网址| 国产一区成人| 亚洲男人的天堂在线观看| 人人爱天天做夜夜爽| 亚洲成人网在线观看| 亚洲一区精品视频在线| 欧美一级一级做性视频| 91色老久久精品偷偷蜜臀| 一级片免费网站| 伊人色天堂| 18禁高潮出水呻吟娇喘蜜芽| 国产白丝av| 国产午夜无码片在线观看网站 | 国产精品一线天| 爽爽影院十八禁在线观看| 美女啪啪无遮挡| 女人一级毛片| 精品午夜国产福利观看| 亚洲自偷自拍另类小说| 久久性妇女精品免费| 免费观看国产小粉嫩喷水| 日韩av资源在线| 无码AV日韩一二三区| 无码久看视频| 女人18毛片一级毛片在线 | 视频一区视频二区中文精品| 国产精品部在线观看| 激情成人综合网| 欧美日韩综合网| 在线亚洲小视频| 精品亚洲麻豆1区2区3区| 久久国产热| 国产一二三区视频| 国产精品久久久久婷婷五月| 欧美a在线| 五月天香蕉视频国产亚| 99久久精品免费看国产免费软件| www亚洲天堂| 一本色道久久88| 日韩国产综合精选| 男女猛烈无遮挡午夜视频| 日本人又色又爽的视频| 26uuu国产精品视频| 91九色国产在线| 国产亚洲精品自在久久不卡| 欧美黄网在线| 国产精品hd在线播放| 国内精自视频品线一二区| 黄色国产在线| 成人国产免费|