Nine major industrial plants in the southern city of Guangzhou
will be removed from the city's urban centre by 2010 as part of an
anti-pollution drive, sources with the Guangzhou environmental
protection department said recently.
The move comes after the Guangzhou Hoton Chemical (Group) Co
Ltd, one of the key raw chemical production bases in the city, was
blacklisted by the national environmental protection watchdog
earlier this month for causing "serious problems," including
potentially excessive pollution.
The nine enterprises, which include the Hoton company, were set
up in the area when it was mainly an industrial zone, but more
residential areas have since been created there in the wake of
urban expansion.
The Hoton firm, which was set up in 1956, now has more than
12,000 people living within a 500-metre radius of the plant and
100,000 residents within a 1,500-metre radius.
The eastern part of Guangzhou, where the Hoton company is
located, has developed into one of the city's booming business and
residential centres.
"A decade ago, we did not expect that the area around our
company would have so many people living in it now," said Kuang
Chaochun, managing director of the Hoton company.
He claimed the company has been considering relocating out of
the area since 2002. He stressed the firm was conscious of the need
to protect the local environment.
"We attach great importance to production safety. We have an
environmental protection office to inspect and examine
environmental effects and deal with possible production problems,"
Kuang said in an interview.
However, the company was one of 11 chemical plants which were
named by the State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) in a nationwide
survey of 78 factories for posing serious environmental threats and
potential dangers.
Sources with the SEPA said that Hoton did not have any warning
signs or facilities to deal with possible chemical spills, asking
for the plant to be moved out of the residential area.
"A chemical spill, together with other environmental threats,
would lead to a disaster not only for the chemical plant, but most
importantly the residents, so it is necessary to remove the plant
out of the residential areas," said an official surnamed Huang,
with the Guangzhou Environmental Bureau.
Although there have been no serious environmental cases related
to the Hoton company since its establishment, the company will
still be moved out of the residential area by 2008, according to
Huang.
Along with the relocation plan for the nine industrial plants,
the local government is conducting a new round of inspections of
the city's chemical factories until June.
"Any plants found to have potential dangers or posing great
serious environmental threats would be asked to install or upgrade
the required facilities," Huang said.
Apart from the inspection programme, Zhang Jinmeng, a professor
from South China University of Technology, said the city needed to
better position its industrial structure to prevent potential
environmental risks from happening in the long-term.
According to Zhang, about half of the Guangzhou-based plants to
be relocated specialize in chemical products and are located along
the Pearl River, posing the severe threat of water pollution to the
city.
"An imbalance of the industrial structure will also lead to a
possible major environmental crisis," Zhang said.
Guangzhou's proposals to relocate chemical plants are in
accordance with a national environmental campaign in the wake of
last November's chemical spill in northeast China's Songhua River
which triggered the country's biggest environmental crisis.
SEPA is supervising and launching national inspections targeting
medium and large-sized enterprises along major rivers and their
tributaries, especially chemical plants in water-source areas or
densely populated regions.
(China Daily February 21, 2006)