The local government of Harbin, capital of Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, launched a campaign on
Friday targeting industrial companies within the basin of the
Songhua River to ensure water safety for its nearly 4 million urban
residents.
In a plan unveiled on Friday, the city government ordered all
districts and counties under its jurisdiction to investigate the
companies, either along the river or depending directly on the
Songhua River, which traverses Harbin from west to east.
A total of 541 chemical, papermaking, food-processing and
pharmaceutical companies along the Harbin section of the Songhua
River will be under the scrutiny of inspectors.
Domestic or aquatic animal breeding near the water source of the
river has also been banned.
The inspection will last until September 15 when all information
must be submitted to the Harbin Environment Protection Bureau.
The information will include basic company details, the
components and volume of the pollutant, and its emergency-response
plan for accidents.
Companies that discharge wastewater directly into the river
without processing will face either suspension or closure,
according to the plan.
By the end of this year, all direct wastewater discharge outlets
along the river will be closed, it said.
This is the first time that the local government has set a
deadline for polluting companies since a major river pollution
accident last November, caused by a chemical plant blast in Jilin
City, Jilin Province, in the upper reaches of the
Songhua River.
The plan came shortly after another pollution incident in which
about 10 tons of chemicals were dumped into a tributary on August
21. Local environment authorities excluded the possibility that the
river's water quality would be affected by the accident.
(China Daily September 2, 2006)