Off the wire
U.S. fighter planes in rare Taiwan landing  • Obama commends Nigerian leaders for peaceful election  • Roundup: Zimbabwe's major sectors bemoan harsh operating environment  • 2nd LD: China to reform rural teacher, public hospital, people's juror systems  • Kenya's Limo misses Boston marathon due to back injury  • 997 people killed in Iraqi violence in March: UN  • U.S. Republican lawmaker says ties with Israel remain strong  • FLASH: MARTIAL LAW LIFTED IN THAILAND  • Urgent: Martial law lifted in Thailand  • FLASH: BOKO HARAM "WILL SOON KNOW THE STRENGTH OF OUR COLLECTIVE WILL" -- NIGERIA'S PRESIDENT-ELECT BUHARI  
You are here:   Home

New brokerage promotes international wastewater treatment cooperation

Xinhua, April 1, 2015 Adjust font size:

The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has unveiled a brokerage service to promote cooperation in wastewater treatment between China and other developing nations.

The service, which will be run by the China Beijing Environment Exchange (CBEEX), was launched in Beijing on Wednesday as a platform to help countries in need of wastewater treatment products find reliable manufacturers via a new website linked to en.chinagate.cn.

The CBEEX will also act as a guarantor for both sides.

According to Du Shaoping, head of a center researching low-carbon initiatives at Beijing Institute of Technology, China has advantages in the wastewater treatment sector mainly due to the low cost of its products.

Zhang Shigang, the UNEP's representative in China, said at the launch ceremony that the organization has organized experts to survey wastewater treatment technology in more than 20 cities in China over the past year.

In the same period, the UNEP carried out research in developing nations including in Africa to learn about their demand for wastewater treatment.

In recent years, as urbanization accelerates and the population expands in developing nations, water pollution has come to pose a severe threat to health and the environment.

A recent report jointly produced by the UNEP, UN-Habitat and the World Health Organization showed that only 20 percent of global wastewater is currently being treated, leaving low-income countries hardest hit by contaminated water supplies and disease.

The new brokerage service is part of the UNEP's Global Wastewater Initiative, announced in 2013 to try to improve the situation by urging international organizations, governments and private sectors to make joint efforts in preventing further pollution and damage. Endi