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China drafts new rules to curb mining pollution amid huge levels of environmental degradation

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A file picture of pollution at a copper mine in Fujian province. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

China plans to raise environmental standards in its highly polluting mining sector, according to a policy draft circulated by the Ministry of Environmental Protection.

Amid rising concerns about the state of its environment, mainland China has declared war on polluters and has drawn up new laws, standards and punishments aimed at forcing firms and local governments to toe the line.

The mining sector has been a crucial part of the nation’s rapid economic expansion in the last three decades, but poor regulation and weak enforcement of standards has contaminated much of the country’s soil and left parts of its land and water supplies unfit for human use, threatening public health.

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According to draft rules published on the website of the Ministry of Environmental Protection late last week, miners will be forced to treat more than 85 per cent of their wastewater and they must put systems in place to achieve the “comprehensive utilisation” of tailings and other solid waste.

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In this file photo from November 2012, excavators load rare earth onto trucks in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province. Photo: ImagineChina
In this file photo from November 2012, excavators load rare earth onto trucks in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province. Photo: ImagineChina

Firms will also be forced to implement measures to remediate land and minimise emissions while mines are still in operation, rather than treating soil and water long after it has been contaminated.

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