China's environmental NGOs have been called upon to play a bigger role in
promoting and supervising environmental protection, now an important part of
China's social and economic construction.
Zhu Guangyao, deputy head of the State Environmental Protection
Administration, said in Beijing on Saturday that environmental protection in
China has undergone historic changes.
"Environmental protection has become a major task of China's modernization.
Environmental capacity has become a major consideration in planning development
projects. Environmental administration has become a major means to adjust
economic structure. Environmental standard has become a major condition for
market access. Environmental cost has become a major factor in the price
formulation mechanism," Zhu told a conference on sustainable growth of China's
environmental NGOs.
He said the new circumstances have given non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) more opportunities to advise the government on environmental affairs,
protect the environmental rights and interests of the public, mobilize the
public to participate in environmental protection and promote international
exchanges and cooperation in this field.
The conference was
sponsored by nearly 400 Chinese environmental NGOs. China had 2,768
environmental NGOs representing 224,000 environmental activities by 2005.
Zeng Xiaodong, Vice-Chairman of the All-China Environment Federation, said
China has 315,000 NGOs of various sorts representing more than 3 million people
at present. The number of environmental NGOs remains relatively not big enough.
However, he predicted the number of China's environmental NGOs and
environmental activists will grow fast in the coming five to ten
years.
Activities of China's environmental NGOs include educating the
public about the importance of environmental protection, promoting methods to
cut consumption of electricity and water, championing environmental petitions,
and organizing activities to clean the environment.
The legal service center under the All-China Environment Federation, for
instance, has provided legal assistance to victims of 68 pollution incidents
since its establishment more than a year ago.
"It has helped the government to resolve 12 environmental pollution cases,
which affected the interests of tens of thousands of people. It also played a
role in dissolving several mass protests," said Zeng.
SEPA deputy
head Zhu Guangyao said the public enjoys the right to know the environmental
situation and participate in and supervise environmental protection work.
"China's environmental NGOs have safeguarded the environmental rights and
interests of the public through providing legal assistance and caring for the
interests of disadvantaged groups," said Zhu.