BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China is to elevate the status of the State
Environmental Protection Administration to a ministry, which is among the major
27 ministries and commissions of the Cabinet, said Hua Jianmin,
secretary-general of the State Council, on Tuesday.
"Environmental protection is the fundamental policy of our country, and is
crucial to the existence and development of the Chinese nation," Hua, also a
State Councilor, said in an explanation of a government reshuffle plan at the
ongoing parliamentary session.
China will face the severe challenge of environmental protection for a long
time to come, with the arduous task of reducing pollutants, he noted.

State Councilor Hua Jianmin, who is also Secretary General of the
State Council, delivers the explanation of the plan for institutional
restructuring of the State Council during the fourth plenary meeting of the
First Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of
the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 11, 2008.
The new ministry aims "to step up environmental improvement and ecological
protection and accelerate the building of a resource-saving and
environment-friendly society," said Hua.
He added the ministry is responsible for drafting and implementing
programs, policies and standards concerning environmental protection, working
out environmental functions in different regions, supervising pollution
prevention and treatment, and tackling major environmental issues.
The change is welcomed by deputies to the National People's Congress.
"It is really exciting," said Huang Xinhua, vice director of the
environmental protection bureau of Huizhou, Guangdong province.
"The environmental protection work of China will have more room for
improvement," she said.
"This elevation shows the government has become more concerned with
environmental protection," said Wei Fusheng, academician with the Chinese
Academy of Engineering.
Environmental protection has been highlighted in recent years, as China's
economic miracle has brought in its wake severe challenges to the environment.
In 2006, China missed the pollution control goals of cutting two main
pollutants by two percent.
In 2007, for the first time in recent years, the country reported a fall in
both chemical oxygen demand, a main index of water pollution, and the total
emission of sulphur dioxide, a main air pollutant, because of tightened
pollution control.