Want China Times, Staff Reporter 2014-01-04
A worker in Enshi in China's central Hubei province uses a turner to mix in powdered tobacco plants and other materials for compost at a bio-organic fertilizer plant, Oct. 28.(Photo/Xinhua) |
China's
rapid economic development over past years has strained its environmental
capacity, as evidenced by a national land survey showing medium or heavy
pollution in 50 million acres of arable land, which threatens the nation's
grain supply and food safety.
The figure
was contained in the findings of the second national land survey, put forth by
Wang Shiyuan, vice minister of the Ministry of Land and Resources, on Dec. 30.
In 2011
Zhou Shengxian, minister of environmental protection, had already reported at a
meeting of the standing committee of the 11th National People's Congress that
150 million acres of arable land, or 8.3% of the total, had been polluted.
To prevent
further deterioration of the problem, the State Council is aiming to clarify
land status and establish a strict environmental protection system for land by
2015.
To clarify
land status, the Chinese government is conducting a comprehensive examination
of the pollution of land by heavy metals, as a prelude for the production of a
national land pollution map.
In contrast
to the extensive awareness of water and air pollution among Chinese people,
many people are ill informed about land pollution, according to the
Chinese-language National Business Daily.
Three major
sources of land pollutants are industrial and mining emissions, abuse in the
use of chemical fertilizer and pesticides, and illegal disposal of waste.
Land
pollution, for all its obscurity, is a long-term problem which is not easily
rectified, and which could have grave consequences threatening the nation's grain
and food safety, according to Qian Guanlin, vice director of the Population,
Resources, and Environmental Committee, under the National Political
Consultative Conference.
In a report
published in 2013, the Ministry of Environmental Protection noted that China's
land pollution is discouraging, pointing to serious land pollution in areas
with many heavy-polluting enterprises, areas with industrial clustering, mining
and outlying areas.
Qian
Guanlin said that resolving land pollution is a formidable task, involving the
resettlement of workers when moving polluting enterprises and compensation for
the economic loss of farmers and for the damage to people's health, adding that
if this is not delicately handled it risks disturbing the balance of social
harmony and stability.
Wang
Shiyuan reported that the Chinese government will spend several tens of
billions of yuan annually rehabilitating polluted land and coping with excess
groundwater consumption in the coming years.
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