Posts Tagged ‘mep’

Environmental damage tops GDP growth in some areas

October 18th, 2008

From China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection Media News

Human activities such as pollution and over-grazing, and natural disasters such as sandstorms, mudslides, landslides and floods, are inflicting damage amounting to 200 billion yuan (US$29.2 billion) each year to China’s most fragile ecological regions. In some regions the cost of environmental degradation is higher than GDP growth, according to a report published by the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

The report – An Outline National Plan to Protect Ecotones – concentrates on eight key regions that are important areas for the preservation of biodiversity but are particularly sensitive to environmental disruptions and climate change. The regions – called ecotones – are transitional areas between distinct ecosystems.

The ecotones lie in five main areas – the arid and semi-arid zones of northern China, mountainous areas in south and southwest China, the Tibetan plateau, and flood prone wetlands in east China. They are home to many of the 23.6 million Chinese people who live in absolute poverty.

I am in search of the Chinese version of this report, assuming that it has not been translated yet.

Ministry of Environmental Protection

May 6th, 2008

This is a late post, but the elevation of status for the State Environmental Protection Agency to Ministry of Environmental Protection is a very important event to mark.

In 2008, the Eleventh National People’s Congress (NPC) Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) elevates the status of State Environmental Protection Agency to a “Super-ministry” (or cabinet ministry)—Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP).

Link to the article:  Question Is Not Big or Small, but Efficiency