All cities in northeast China's
Liaoning Province now have special vehicles to detect and
respond to environmental accidents.
Authorities recently handed over environment emergency
monitoring vehicles to 11 of the 14 cities in the province.
The other three cities, Shenyang, Dalian and Fushun, equipped
themselves with the mobile stations several years ago.
"These vehicles mean it will take us less than half the time it
would have done to monitor and examine pollution incidents if we
faced such environmental disasters as the Songhua River accident.
Our system is now among the best in China," said Zhao Hengxin, a
top official from Liaoning Environmental Protection Bureau.
An 80 kilometre-long slick of benzene was formed on the Songhua
River last November after a blast at a neighbouring PetroChina
chemical factory in the northeastern Jilin Province.
The 14 vehicles, costing 700,000 yuan (US$87,500) each, are
specially designed for environmental purposes. Their back seats
have been removed to fit various kinds of monitoring equipment,
including refrigerators, generators and labs. On its roofs, there
are monitoring cameras.
The vehicles are capable of accurately detecting the pollutants'
volume and any changes in water and air to provide immediate
assistance at accident sites.
"With these mobile detecting stations, we can drive into the
heart of the accident area and start work there. This could make
the difference between life and death at certain accidents," said
Bi Tong, chief of Liaoning environmental monitoring central
station.
The vehicles may also eventually be used for monitoring the
cities' major pollutant producers, such as chemical plants.
But Zhao said the current vehicles have only basic equipment,
which are confined for water and air examination.
"We need at least 2 million yuan (US$250,000) to equip each
vehicle to do more things," Zhao said.
Liaoning has taken a range of measures to protect the
environment.
It has invested almost 300 million yuan (US$37 million) in
establishing 68 air and eight water monitoring stations in
sensitive areas.
"We have covered all 44 counties with such stations, which can
provide basic pollution monitoring and examination," said Zhao.
The province's emergency response mechanism, however, is still
considered rather backward.
According to Zhao, Liaoning will invest 1 billion yuan (US$123
million) to build an environmental alert and response system during
the 11th Five Plan (2006-10) period.
In order to deal with increasing environmental disasters,
several major cities in China, such as Beijing, Shanghai and
Guangzhou, have been equipped with such vehicles.
Industry insiders said the potential market for the vehicles is
huge, with the country paying more attention to environmental
protection.
(China Daily March 20, 2006)