英闻天下——561 Groundwater Pollution Arouses Concern
时间:2013-04-23 05:30:42
搜索关注在线英语听力室公众号:tingroom,领取免费英语资料大礼包。
(单词翻译)
Water contamination has caught increasing attention among the Chinese public.
Some have gone so far as to challenge local environmental officials to swim in a polluted river.
Ma Jun has been an active environmentalist for more than 10 years.
"About half of the surface water being monitored is polluted to some extent. And now some say 90 percent of the groundwater is contaminated as well. I think that refers to the shallow groundwater, which can be easily
affected1 by the surface. The situation in the deep layer is better."
However, Ma adds that's nothing to be cheerful about.
"The water contamination in China is now expanding from the surface to the ground. It spreads from small spots to large areas. The latest data from the
Ministry2 of Environmental Protection shows that by 2011, half of the water wells monitored in 200 cities are scaled as poor or very poor in quality."
Minister of Water Resources Chen Lei says the government is taking the issue seriously.
"We've drafted plans for preventing groundwater pollution. We're now working together with the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the Ministry of Land and Resources to crack down on illegal sewage discharges. People will have clean, trustworthy and safe water."
Many grassroots organizations are also getting
actively3 involved in the cause.
For example, Ma and his Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs have set up a system to map water pollution sources. It can also provide information about the water quality and the sewage discharge situations.
"In China, nearly 300 million rural people can't have clean potable water every year. One of the main reasons for that is the groundwater pollution. It also affects the soil and causes problems for grain production."
According to Ma, China has the technical capacity and money to solve the problem but it lacks the most important thing, the
impetus4. The reasons range from law enforcement difficulties to a lack of social
supervision5.
To Ma, the disclosure of environmental information, especially pollution sources, is the key to solve the problem.
Together with many other environmentalists, Ma is pushing the government to disclose monitoring data online.
"Just think when we open the environmental information to the public, especially the information about pollution sources, we will put these polluting enterprises under the sun. Under such pressure, the local governments will have to strengthen their law enforcement. And it'll be easier to obtain evidence in environmental
lawsuits6 as well. In this way we can improve the social supervision."
The recently issued
pollutants7 monitoring regulation
stipulates8 polluters must publish their monitoring data to the public.
Zhang Quan is the director of Shanghai Environmental Protection Bureau. He is also a deputy to the 12th National People's Congress.
"The information about pollutants will be more open of course. However, it needs some time. When doing so, I think, we should make sure the data is accurate, trustworthy and scientific. Wrong information may arouse panic. I think information disclosure is the key principle and
covert9 information is only an exception."
However, information disclosure is not the final goal for environmentalists like Ma.
"We cannot stop there. I want to know the
density10 of PM 2.5 to see whether I need a mask, but I can't do that forever. I need to know who is responsible for that and then
curb11 it."
For CRI, I'm He Fei.
分享到: