(February 8, 2002) More than half of the country’s 21,000 chemical plants are located along the Yangtze and Yellow rivers, said SEPA director Zhou Shengxian, adding that many had not conducted environmental impact assessments and were built in improper locations.
Other News Sources
Cancer in village raises water fears
(February 7, 2002) ‘With the health of villagers in the Han valley already compromised by foul-smelling rivers, the massive north-south water transfer scheme appears set to make matters worse.’
Elderly protester freed after ‘vow’ to drop flood demands
(January 23, 2002) An 82-year-old Shaanxi farmer who campaigns on behalf of people who lost land to the Sanmenxia dam has been released from detention after being asked to promise not to demand more compensation related to the 2003 Wei River floods.
China’s pollution galvanises peasants to action
(January 20, 2002) ‘Mrs Song never had much interest in politics but when factory pollution began poisoning well water and killing crops, the young mother got angry.’
Three Gorges Dam Project to finish earlier
(January 20, 2002) Construction of the Three Gorges Dam Project is expected to be completed in May this year, nine months earlier than scheduled, the Xinhua News Agency has reported.
Shanghai hit by salinity crisis
(February 6, 2006) Shanghai has been hit by its first salinity crisis this year, with a chloride concentration above the recommended level, municipal water authorities announced.
China names and shames 11 industrial polluters
(January 16, 2002) SEPA vice-director Pan Yue also named 10 metals, transportation and power projects under construction near rivers, areas of dense population and ecological protection zones as posing serious environmental dangers.
China officials told to report pollution promptly
(January 16, 2002) Officials and executives who delay reporting or who cover up ‘sudden environmental incidents’ may face criminal prosecution, a SEPA official is quoted as saying.
China faces power oversupply in some regions
(January 13, 2002) While overall power consumption in China has surged over the past five years, the rate of demand is slowing, according to a State Council report.
Green watchdog to sink teeth into factory pollution
(January 10, 2002) ‘We will be watching closely [to see] if SEPA will really ask these plants on the list to stop production if they cannot meet the requirements or if they will only impose penalties, which actually fatten their own pockets,’ Dai Qing is quoted as saying.
China pushing environmental cleanup
(January 1, 2002) Cracking down after a spate of toxic chemical spills, China’s environmental agency has ordered cleanups at some heavily polluting factories and is planning inspections of other big projects.
Net portals braced for more curbs on content
(December 31, 2001) Sources say the pressure on the Chinese media has become so intense that the Southern Metropolis News recently decided to cut back on coverage of news that would offend the authorities.
Editor fired over reports criticising authorities
(December 29, 2001) Chen Jieren’s newspaper ran a story that said relief funds allocated by Beijing to flood victims in Shaanxi were held up by provincial and municipal governments. The story upset the Shaanxi government, which complained to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.
China outpacing U.S. in energy policy
(December 20, 2001) A U.S. Department of Energy report notes that while China is planning or constructing many new large-scale dams, ‘America no longer builds the hydroelectric dams championed by FDR.’
China’s energy insecurity and Iran’s crisis
(December 15, 2001) The current Iranian crisis holds dire economic and non-economic consequences for China, Iran’s energy partner. The China-Iran connection covers a whole spectrum of economic activities, including dam-building.


