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Yangtze conservation work making progress cleaning up chemical firms

Updated: Mar 14, 2019 China Daily Print
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Over the past three years, Hubei Xingfa Chemicals Group Co Ltd has shut down about one-third of its production capacity and four chemical waste discharge flues along the Yangtze River.

The moves are in line with government calls for improving ecological protection and cleaning up China's "mother river", which has faced severe environmental challenges in recent years.

Central government bodies and provincial authorities along the river have been prioritizing the protection of the Yangtze since 2016, when President Xi Jinping highlighted environmental restoration and protection in and around the country's longest waterway.

Li Guozhang, chairman of Hubei Xingfa Chemicals Group Co, said that the company took the lead in shuttering plants near the river in 2016.

Despite strong opposition from management: "We formed an understanding that lagging production capacity had to be eliminated and updated. The relocation was a challenge, but it was an opportunity if we grabbed the chance to upgrade our products," he said.

Three years since relocation projects began, the group has not laid off any employees but instead added 1,300 new workers as their new operations - microelectronics and organic silicon - have gained momentum, Li added.

With an investment of about 2 billion yuan ($300 million), new business has taken up about 20 percent of Xingfa's overall operations.

Xingfa is one of the petrochemical companies that shut down polluting production, and it has relocated production to new areas of Yichang, Hubei province, away from the river.

The petrochemical industry has fueled strong growth in Yichang for years.

Last year Yichang achieved strong recovery with GDP growth climbing to 7.7 percent from 2.4 percent in 2017. Its gross domestic product reached over 400 billion yuan.

The transformation and update of traditional industries for a city like Yichang is a must, not an option, said Zhang Jiasheng, mayor of Yichang and a deputy to the National People's Congress.

"Only by taking initiatives will lagging-behind industries have more opportunities," he said.

Last year, the city continued its efforts to relocate petrochemical enterprises and close outdated production facilities. Two companies moved into industrial parks and three optimized their production structures.

The city took the lead in the province in shutting down its coal mining industry, which had operated for about 200 years. This year, another four petrochemical companies will be closed, 18 updated, and 14 relocated, Zhang said.

The city government has set up a subsidy fund of 500 million yuan that from 2018 to 2020 helps petrochemical companies relocate and optimize structures, and another 20 million yuan to develop technology to more efficiently extract phosphogypsum, the waste product of phosphorus-related production, to help reduce pollution.

Innovations have stimulated the city's development and smoothed transformation to high-end and environmentally friendly industries, he added.

The city has fostered biological medicine, electrical information, new materials and equipment manufacturing to drive its new economic growth. In 2018, the four sectors have taken up 38.1 percent of its industrial gross production value.

Jiang Chaoliang, Party secretary of Hubei province and an NPC deputy, said Hubei has the longest stretch of the Yangtze, and is also home to the Three Gorges Dam, so a vibrant ecology and green development are top priorities in guiding the province to achieve high-quality development.

In 2018, across the province, more than 100 petrochemical firms along the Yangtze were closed and relocated. More than 1,200 wharves were abolished, and water quality within the province has been steadily improved.

To better preserve the ecology along the Yangtze, a systematic and national level management network integrating related government sectors should be established to plan, regulate and guide the process, said Niu Xinqiang, head of the Changjiang Institute of Survey, Planning, Design and Research.

Overfishing and shipping have also contributed to the degradation of the fishing industry in the river, said Niu.

Lack of proper waste disposal treatment is also a grave threat to the river. Cities along the river have to strengthen new infrastructure, better process sewage and enhance water conservation, he added.

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