China still faces serious pollution problems in its offshore
areas, despite the fact that its ocean pollution has been improved,
the State Oceanic Administration (SOA) said in Beijing
Saturday.
The marine environmental quality report for 2003, released by
the SOA Saturday, showed that China altogether has 867 main
outlets to discharge pollutants from the land into the sea. In
2003, about 880 million tons of sewage water, containing 1.28
million tons of pollutants, was discharged into the sea through
20outlets under strict monitoring of the SOA.
Most of the offshore areas face heavy pollution and the ecology
system in the seas has been widely affected. Some offshore areas
are even devoid of life, according to the report.
In north China's Dalian Bay and Jinzhou Bay and the mouth area
of south China's Pearl River, the seashell ocean creatures are
still high in toxic substances including lead, cadmium, arsenic and
coliform bacteria.
Pollution has even changed the ecological structure in mouth
areas of the Yellow River, the Yangtze River and the Pearl River.
In 2003, the red tides of toxic algae hit China 119 times,
affecting a total of 14,000 square kilometers.
The report also showed that the density of marine phytoplankton
rose in most offshore areas last year and the number of jellyfish
also multiplied, menacing the life of fish.
Due to pollution, the density of marine phytoplankton in near
sea has risen and some tropical ocean life has invaded some parts
of the sea in north China, putting creatures in inland areas in
great danger.
The major pollutants were still inorganic nitrogen, phosphates and
lead, coming from sewage water, industrial wastes, chemical
fertilizers and farm chemicals, said Ma Deyi, director of the
National Marine Environmental Monitoring Center.
Ma suggested mass disposal of sewage water and better protection
of sewage and soil to reduce ocean pollution.
China boasts a sea area of 3 million square kilometers, most
basically in good environmental condition. Last year, approximately
142,000 square km of ocean areas in China failed to comply with the
quality of clean sea water, 32,000 less than the previous year,
said the report.
Water quality in zones used for aquatic breeding and the
environment in bathing beaches are good as a whole, noted the
report.
By the end of 2003, China had set up more than 80 oceanic
natural reserve areas, among which 24 are at the state level.
(Xinhua News Agency February 1, 2004)