Home>News Center>China
       
 

City to tear down polluting chimneys
(China Daily)
Updated: 2004-04-01 00:59

Shenyang, heavily polluted after decades of economic planning geared at energy-consuming and environmentally-destructive production, plans to pull down some 3,000 highly-contaminating factory chimneys in the next couple of years.

The local government will tear down one third of them this year, said a source from the city's environment protection bureau.

Shenyang, capital of Northeast China's Liaoning Province, which is applying for the title of Garden City in China, plans to invest 150 million yuan (US$18 million) in this cleanup project to eliminate 1,000 high-polluting industrial chimneys this year.

In addition, 400 small boilers will be extinguished forever this year.

This is only one part of the city's environmental-protection campaign aimed at turning the tide in the most severely polluted city.

Once the campaign is over, there will be less than 1,000 smokestacks left, said Liu Peng of the city's environmental protection bureau.

About 600 factory chimneys will be kept and cleaning devices will be installed in them.

"The environment is vital for Shenyang's rejuvenation. We would pursue new ways of development but never trade it for temporary GDP growth as in the past," said Chen Zhenggao, mayor of Shenyang.

In 1988, Shenyang, cradle of the nation's industrial base, was identified by the World Health Organization (WHO) as one of the 10 most polluted cities in the world.

The city burned about 11 million tons of coal a year for both industrial purposes and domestic heating and cooking.

Sulfur dioxide (SO2) and particulate pollution were especially severe.

There were hundreds of metallurgical, chemical, paper, automotive and other industrial plants in and around the city.

"Your face and clothes would get cloaked with coal particles only if you walked through the district of Tiexi in the 1970's," Kong Fanwen, a 60-year-old local citizen told China Daily. Tiexi is one district of Shenyang, which housed many workshops.

"It is not only about pulling down the old chimneys. It shows our determination to turn to the new way of development, a green and sustainable way," said Shi Qijin, director of Shenyang environment protection bureau.

Local authorities have developed a set of measures to deal with pollution, including reforming the heating system, enforcing automobile inspections and seeking international assistance in accordance with the nation's issuance of environmental protection law in 1996.

Highly-polluting industries have been closed down or moved out of the city.

The province signed an agreement with the European Union (EU) in 1998 to jointly deal with the problem in the field of improving overall environmental management, encouraging enterprises to use clean production techniques and developing coal-bed methane resources to replace coal.

Romano Oscari, an expert from the EU who took in the project told China Daily that the general situation has shown marked improvement.

"I need not polish my shoes for more than one week now, which was unimaginable in 1999 when I first came here."

This has not come easily. A total of 2,234 smokestacks and 800 boilers have been eliminated only in the past two years.

The city's green belt amounted to 35 per cent of the urban area at the end of 2003, statistics from the local environmental protection bureau show.

In 2002, the city invested more than 6 billion yuan (US$726 million) in environmental projects, amounting to two thirds of its annual budget.

 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Technology sector gets US$1 billion input

 

   
 

Oil prices follow global market rises

 

   
 

NPC hears views on HK law

 

   
 

Neighbours find ways to work together

 

   
 

Dead cold lobsters 'live' again

 

   
 

New rules hold assessors liable

 

   
  Residence permits urged for foreigners
   
  Visa application rules altered for US visitors
   
  Suicide attempts on the rise in China
   
  3,798 punished over SARS negligence
   
  Farmers go looking for love in cities
   
  Training abroad gets stricter supervision
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  Sex Education, a necessary evil?  
Advertisement