BEIIJING: China made marked progress in controlling water pollution last year, with discharges of major water pollutants continuing to decline, according to the Ministry of Ecology and Environment.
China saw 87.9 percent of its surface water rated as being of fairly good quality last year, up by 3 percentage points from 2021, said Huang Xiaozeng, head of the ministry’s department of water ecology and environment.
The quality of about 0.7 percent of the country’s surface water remained below Grade V, the worst quality, down by 0.5 percentage points. Under China’s six-tier quality system for surface water, the quality of water is considered as being fairly good if it reaches Grade III and above.
The quality of water in the trunk of the Yangtze River, Asia’s longest watercourse, has stayed at Grade II for three straight years, Huang continued.
In the entire Yangtze basin, he said, 98.1 percent of national monitoring stations reported fairly good water quality last year, up by 1 percentage point year-on-year.
The achievements occurred thanks to a series of actions the country has taken in the basin.
The ministry has located over 60,000 sewage outlets that discharge into the Yangtze trunk, nine of its major tributaries and Taihu Lake, he said. To date, it has found the sources of sewage in 90 percent of the outlets and addressed violations in more than 20,000 of them.
Measures were also rolled out to ramp up the treatment of wastewater in industrial parks, as well as to enhance the management of tailings ponds in mines and the phosphorus sector, he said. Rectification, for example, has been completed in 843 of the total 1,137 tailings ponds found with violations in the Yangtze basin. “We will keep a close eye on the rest of the ponds with violations to ensure that all of them will be adequately rectified,” he said.
–The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item