The state of the ecology has continued to deteriorate, the country's top 
environment watchdog warned yesterday and promised better protection efforts. 
 
 
   A distressed family yesterday 
 take out dead fish from their pond in Xiaoshan District of Hangzhou, 
 capital of East China's Zhejiang Province. The fish were first found 
 floating on Friday afternoon, possibly due to pollution from a nearby 
 factory, according to Yin, the owner of the fishpond. Fish, shrimps, crabs 
 and tortoises weighing 50,000 kilograms were dead by yesterday, causing a 
 loss of 300,000 yuan (US$37,500), Yin said. The local environment 
 authorities are investigating the case. 
[newsphoto] | 
Excessive logging, degradation 
of natural pasture land, shrinking wetlands, overuse of pesticides and 
fertilizers in farmland and contaminated coastal areas are just some of the 
major problems the country faces, according to China Ecological Protection, the 
first overview report released by the State Environmental Protection 
Administration (SEPA). 
The release of the report coincides with World Environment Day today, and the 
national theme is to promote "Ecological Safety and an Environment-friendly 
Society." 
"The Chinese Government places great importance on ecological protection and 
has adopted a series of strategic plans," the report said. "As a result, the 
ecological environment in some key areas has improved," the report said. 
"But due to the meagre per capita resources and regional disparities, the 
deterioration trend of the country's fragile ecological environment as a whole 
has remained unchecked," said the report. 
Among the findings are: 
The ecology of 60 per cent of the country's territory is considered fragile. 
A national study in 2000 rated the ecological quality of one-third of the 
country's territory as good and another third as bad. 
About 90 per cent of natural pasture land, which accounts for more than 40 
per cent of the country's territory, is facing degradation and desertification 
to some extent. Desertified pastures have become the major source of sand and 
dust storms. 
About 40 per cent of the country's wetlands are under effective protection 
but vast areas of natural wetlands continue to wither or shrink due to farming 
and industrial activity. 
"Large areas of natural wetlands have been replaced by paddy fields or 
construction, especially in the Yangtze and Pearl River delta regions," said Shu 
Jianmin, vice-president of the Chinese Research Academy of Environmental 
Sciences. 
SEPA will push for a comprehensive legal system on environment protection and 
strengthen law enforcement to crack down on violations, the report said. 
Factoring in the environment for calculation of economic growth and building 
an ecological compensation mechanism will top SEPA's agenda, said the report. 
While supporting the measures SEPA has mapped out, some environmental 
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are sceptical about the need for more 
legislation. 
"We already have many environmental protection laws and the problem is how to 
implement them," said Li Junhui, who is in charge of public co-operation in 
Friends of Nature. 
"Our biggest challenge lies in how to incorporate environment protection into 
economic development policies," she said. 
Li also suggested giving enterprises incentives to reduce ecological damage 
they cause. 
Liao Xiaoyi, president of Global Village of Beijing, said "local environment 
bureaus should be independent of local governments and under direct SEPA 
command." 
Liao would also dearly like to see a public participation mechanism on 
environment protection, which is supported by the central government and 
involves enterprises, environment NGOs and the people. 
(China Daily 06/05/2006 page1)