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Green
effort key to future of officials---Dr
.Huang Shengchu had an Interview with Reporter of China
Daily
By Fu Jing
Updated: 2007-07-31 07:04
The central government is setting up an accountability
system under which officials' career paths will be tied to
their performance in environment protection and energy
efficiency.
The move aims to steer the country toward a more
environment-friendly road to economic growth.
The State Council, China's cabinet, is working on the
"environmental veto system", under which green efforts will
be a decisive factor in determining the future of government
and Party officials, a senior policymaker told China Daily.
Previously, the assessment of officials focused on their
performance in areas such as economic growth, family
planning and workplace safety.
The central government will demand full compliance with the
accountability system from heads of local governments and
Party committees as well as their deputies charged with
energy conservation and environmental protection, said He
Bingguang, deputy director of the resource utilization and
environmental protection department of National Development
and Reform Commission (NDRC).
The system will help keep local governments in step with the
central government, which is "resolutely committed" to
energy conservation and emission control. China's goal is to
cut its energy consumption per unit of GDP by 20 percent and
pollutant discharge by 10 percent from 2006 to 2010.
The NDRC official declined to set a timetable for
implementation of the new official assessment system.
In early July, the official revealed, inspection teams from
the central government discovered that some local
governments had kept investing heavily in resource-intensive
industries, ignoring Beijing's call for the reduction of
energy use and greenhouse gas emissions.
In fact, the official said, the central government started
to set targets for officials in 2006 - of lowering energy
consumption per unit of GDP by 4 percent annually till 2010.
However, a recent survey shows, except for Beijing, no
provincial government succeeded in delivering on the
targets.
Taking that into consideration, NDRC has decided that
officials should be assessed on a five-year performance
rather than in a single year.
Environmental experts applauded the proposed "veto system"
but also warned that it might be hard to put into practice.
"Local governments face huge difficulties in saving energy,"
said Huang Shengchu, head of the China Coal Information
Institute (CCII), affiliated to the State Administration of
Work Safety. "The new system will affect many officials if
you are to measure their performance by environmental
targets. And there is a likelihood that many of them would
fail."
Huang, a senior researcher in work safety and coalmine gas
management, said the new system will demonstrate the will of
the central government but in practice, it may meet
resistance.
Even though officials are asked to make a pledge on
workplace safety, major mining accidents have not been
stopped, he said.
(China Daily 07/31/2007 page1) |