Help | Sitemap | Archive | Advanced Search | Mirror in USA   
  CHINA
  BUSINESS
  OPINION
  WORLD
  SCI-EDU
  SPORTS
  LIFE
  WAP SERVICE
  FEATURES
  PHOTO GALLERY

Message Board
Feedback
Voice of Readers
China Quiz
 China At a Glance
 Constitution of the PRC
 State Organs of the PRC
 CPC and State Leaders
 Chinese President Jiang Zemin
 White Papers of Chinese Government
 Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping
 English Websites in China
Help
About Us
SiteMap
Employment

U.S. Mirror
Japan Mirror
Tech-Net Mirror
Edu-Net Mirror
 
Saturday, November 04, 2000, updated at 10:56(GMT+8)
Life  

Policy Makers from West China Learn to Be Environment Friendly

Policy makers from China's west finished Friday an "education class" on environmental protection with the close of a five-day international forum on policies enhancing sustainable development.

The forum, jointly sponsored by China's National School of Administration and the World Bank Institute, was mainly designed to encourage local officials from the west to take the factor of the environment into consideration for sustainable development.

China is carrying out an ambitious strategy to develop its backward and resources-rich west regions in a move to narrow down the gap between the east and west in economic and social development.

At the forum, 10 lecturers elaborated from different angles the significance for a harmonious relationship between regional development and the protection of natural resources, and the role environmental protection policies play in promoting regional sustainable development.

Xie Zhenhua, minister in charge of the State Environmental Protection Administration, said that China plans to reduce pollutants by another 10 percent in the five years to come.

Enterprises that cause pollution will be punished according to law.

He said that the Chinese government will invest more in sewage treatment, aiming to make half of the urban wastewater clean by the year 2004, 35 percent more than it is now.

Vinod Thomas, vice-president of the World Bank, reminded policy makers not to simply woo the economic growth speed, saying that "much as the nutrition quality of diets determines people's health, the quality of growth determines its impact on people's welfare."

Thomas called on the decision makers to pay more attention to a quality economic growth.

Speakers at the forum also included Yukon Huang, chief of the World Bank's Resident Mission in China and director of China Program, Claude Martin, director-general of the World Wild Fund for Nature, and Zhang Kunmin, secretary-general of the China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development.




In This Section
 

Policy makers from China's west finished Friday an "education class" on environmental protection with the close of a five-day international forum on policies enhancing sustainable development.

Advanced Search


 


 


Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved