Off the wire
Chinese shares slip despite better-than-forecast trade data  • Across China: Young entrepreneurs drive China's new agriculture  • New H7N9 case reported in south China  • Three young foreigners charged with drug smuggling in New Zealand  • Australian heatwave causing roads to melt in outback town  • Havana welcomes end of U.S. preferential immigration policy concerning Cubans  • 2nd Ld: China's foreign trade back to growth in Q4  • Tokyo shares close higher following sharp fall previous day  • Poll reflects political polarization during Obama's tenure  • Cambodia sees landmine/UXO casualties drop below 100 for 1st time last year  
You are here:   Home

Tianjin issues 92 mln yuan in pollution fines in 2016

Xinhua, January 13, 2017 Adjust font size:

Tianjin Municipality, a region plagued by air pollution in north China, issued 1,340 pollution fines last year, totalling over 92 million yuan (13.3 million U.S. dollars), environmental authorities said Friday.

The number of fines surged 56 percent year on year, while the value of the fines increased by 7 percent over 2015, said Yang Yong, an official with the municipal environmental protection bureau.

Regular and surprise inspections were organized in key industries, such as steel and cement, garbage burning, coal-firing facilities and ozone control, said Jia Chunning, head of the municipal environmental protection enforcement team.

According to the city's environmental monitoring center, air quality hit national standards for 226 days in 2016, six more days than 2015, while the number of days for heavy air pollution increased by three days to 29.

"Especially this winter, the air quality of the city has not improved compared with 2015," Yang said, adding it had witnessed the worst air pollution in five years.

The city issued a red alert for pollution in mid-December when schools and traffic were disrupted by heavy smog.

Yang said that Tianjin would further speed up the use of clean energy and intensive control of vehicle and industrial pollution. Endi