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China, US, Join to
Fight Pollution
By Jamila Trindle
01 April 2008
Chinese and U.S. officials are working together to find ways to combat
environmental problems. Jamila Trindle reports from Beijing, where the
two countries held their first joint workshop on environmental
cooperation.
Hong
Kong
The meeting Tuesday brought together officials from the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and the Chinese Ministry of Science and
Technology.
Chinese Vice Minister Liu Yanhua says environmental protection is more
important than ever in China, which has some of the most polluted cities
in the world.
Liu says China has made environmental protection one of its top goals.
Topics for the two-day workshop include information about new green
technologies and protecting drinking water supplies.
EPA Assistant Administrator George Gray says for China to assess its
situation accurately it needs to develop good indicators of
environmental health - by improving the measurements it uses and the way
the information is analyzed.
"They're also important for communicating, to tell your ministers, being
able to tell the journalists, being able to tell the public when
progress is being made," Gray said.
China's rapid economic growth, outdated power generation equipment and
poor regulatory system have contributed to a massive pollution problem.
Each year, tens of thousands of people suffer from illnesses linked to
pollution, such as respiratory infections and exposure to tainted water.
The government has acknowledged that the majority of the country's water
supply is badly polluted.
Outside criticism of environmental pollution in China has increased, in
part because air pollutants from China are found as far away as Japan
and the West Coast of the United States. Worldwide concerns about
Beijing's air quality are rising, especially because of the coming
Summer Olympics. At least one top-ranked runner has decided to skip the
games because of the city's often choking air. |