Integrated Reform Plan for Promoting Ecological Progress
2018-07-01 1292
- Area of Law: Environmental Protection
- Level of Authority: Group Provisions
- Date issued:09-21-2015
- Effective Date:09-21-2015
- Status: Effective
- Issuing Authority: Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China State Council
Integrated Reform Plan for Promoting
Ecological Progress
(CPC Central Committee, the State Council September 21, 2015)
This plan has been formulated for putting systematic and complete systems for
improving the ecosystem in place more quickly; achieving faster ecological
progress; and making the reform for promoting ecological progress more
systemic, more holistic, and better coordinated.
I. A General Description
1. The thinking behind the reform
It is crucial to fully implement the guiding principles from the 18th National
Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the second, third, and
fourth plenary sessions of the 18th CPC Central Committee; follow the guidance
of Deng Xiaoping Theory, the Theory of the Three Represents, and the Scientific
Outlook on Development; thoroughly put into practice the guiding principles from
the major speeches of General Secretary Xi Jinping; act in accordance with the
decisions and plans of the CPC Central Committee and the State Council; adhere
to the fundamental state policy of conserving resources and protecting the
environment; and give high priority to resource conservation, environmental
protection, and the restoration of nature. Based on the fundamental context of
China being in the primary stage of socialism and in the particular
characteristics new to China in the present phase, and in order to build a
beautiful China, handle correctly the relationship between humankind and
nature, and solve serious ecological and environmental problems, it is
essential to safeguard China's ecological security, improve the environment,
ensure that resources are used more efficiently, and step up efforts to promote
the formation of a new pattern of modernization in which humankind develops in
harmony with nature.
2. The ideas
The idea is to: Respect, protect, and stay in tune with nature. Ecological conservation
is vital not only to sustained, healthy economic development, but also to
political and social progress, and must therefore be given a position of
prominence and incorporated into every aspect and the whole process of
economic, political, cultural, and social development.
Integrate development and conservation. It is necessary to remain committed to
the strategy of treating development as being of the utmost importance to
China. Development is good only when it is green, circular, and low-carbon.
There should be the right balance between development and conservation. The
intensity of development should be brought under control on the basis of
functional zoning and spatial planning should be adjusted to ensure that
development and conservation are coordinated and reinforce each other so we
leave behind a comfortable place that future generations can call home with
blue skies, green lands, and clear waters.
Foster an understanding that lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable
assets. Fresh air, clean water sources, beautiful rivers and mountains, fertile
land, and biological diversity form an ecological environment that is essential
to human survival. As development is a top priority for China, it is imperative
to protect forests, grasslands, rivers, lakes, wetlands, seas, and other
natural ecosystems.
Cultivate respect for the value of nature and natural capital. Natural
ecosystems have value; the protection of nature is a process of increasing the
value of nature and the value of natural capital, and means the protection and
development of the productive forces. Protection efforts should, then, be
adequately rewarded and come with economic returns.
Seek equilibriums in China's territorial space. To move forward with
development, it is necessary to find the right balance between population,
economy, resources, and the environment and ensure that the population, the
industrial structure, and the economic growth of a region do not surpass its
environmental capacity and the carrying capacity of its water and land
resources.
See that mountains, waters, forests, and farmlands are a community of life.
Based on the integrity and systemic nature of ecosystems and the way they work,
it is necessary to take into consideration all the elements of the natural
ecosystem - both hills and their surrounding areas, both above and under the
ground, both land and sea, both upper and lower river basins -and work to
protect them in their entirety, restore them systematically, and take a
comprehensive approach to their governance in order to preserve ecological
balance by strengthening the ability of ecosystems to circulate.
3. The principles
Ensuring that the reform moves in the right direction. China's market
mechanisms need to be improved, and the government should make better use of
its leadership and regulatory roles. Those in the business sector should bring
their own initiative into play and exercise self-restraint. Social
organizations and the general public should participate and play a supervising
role in ecological conservation.
Maintaining the public nature of natural resource assets. New property rights
systems should be created for natural resources. Ownership rights should be
clarified. There should be a distinction between ownership rights and the authority
to manage. Powers and regulatory responsibilities of the central and local
governments should be divided more appropriately. Everyone should be entitled
to benefit from state-owned natural resource assets.
Integrating environmental governance for rural and urban areas. Continued
efforts should be made to strengthen urban environmental protection and
industrial pollution prevention and control. The rural coverage of ecological
and environmental protection efforts should be expanded. Effective systems and
mechanisms for rural environmental governance should be established. The
development of pollution prevention and control facilities should be stepped up
in rural areas, and related funding should be increased.
Attaching equal importance to incentives and restraints. It is imperative to
develop interest-related mechanisms for promoting green, circular, and
low-carbon development, and at the same time practice strict prevention at the
source of pollution, strict regulation over operations, strict compensation for
environmental damage, and accountability for those responsible in order to
effectively restrain all types of market entities and, step by step, make
ecological conservation efforts more market-, law-, and procedure-based.
Combining China's own independent efforts with international cooperation.
Strengthening ecological conservation and environmental protection is something
China is doing of its own accord, though at the same time it needs to deepen
exchange and practical cooperation with other countries, borrow from their
advanced technology and their valuable experience in institution building, take
an active part in global environmental governance, and assume and perform its
international responsibilities as a large developing country.
Integrating piloting first with overall coordination. It is necessary, in
accordance with the unified plans of the CPC Central Committee and the State
Council, to deal with the easier parts first, move forward step by step, and
launch each reform when conditions are ripe to do so. On the basis of the
fundamental direction laid out in this plan, encouragement should be given to
local governments to explore and experiment boldly in light of their own local
conditions.
4. The objectives
This reform is designed to establish a systematic and complete institutional
framework composed of eight systems for promoting ecological progress with
clearly defined property rights, diversified participation, and equal focus on
incentives and restraints by 2020. It is also designed to modernize China's
governance system and capacity for governance in the field of ecological
progress and usher in a new era for socialist ecological progress. These eight
systems include a system of property rights for natural resource assets, a system
for the development and protection of territorial space, a spatial planning
system, a system for regulating total consumption and comprehensive
conservation of resources, a system for payment-based resource consumption and
compensating conservation and protection efforts, the environmental governance
system, the market system for environmental governance and ecological
preservation, and the system for evaluating officials' ecological conservation
performance and for holding those responsible for ecological damage to account.
A system of property rights for natural resource assets will be established,
according to which ownership is clearly defined, powers and responsibilities
are explicit, and regulation is effective, in order to ensure there are owners
for natural resources and ownership is clear.
A system will be built on the basis of spatial planning for the development and
protection of territorial space, drawing on regulation of its uses as the main
approach, with a view to stopping the over-use of quality cropland and
ecological space, ecological damage, and environmental pollution caused by
disorderly, excessive, and scattered development.
A spatial planning system will be designed, with the main purpose of
strengthening the spatial governance and improving its structure, which is
nationally unified and better connected between different departments of
government, and according to which management is divided between governments at
multiple levels, in an effort to eliminate overlapping and conflicting spatial
plans, the overlap and duplication of responsibilities between departments, and
the issue of local authorities frequently changing their plans.
An effective, standardized, and strictly managed system that achieves complete
coverage will be established for regulating total consumption and comprehensive
conservation of resources, in order to address inefficiency and serious waste
in resource consumption.
A system for payment-based resource consumption and compensating conservation
and protection efforts will be established. The system will reflect market
supply and demand, resource scarcity, the value of nature, and the need for
intergenerational compensation, in order to address the problems of excessively
low prices for natural resources and their products, the cost of production and
development being lower than the social cost, and inadequate incentives for
ecological conservation efforts.
An environmental governance system which is oriented toward improving the
environment, and which incorporates unified regulation, strict law enforcement,
and multi-party participation will be developed in an effort to deal with weak
capacity for pollution prevention and control, overlapping regulatory functions
between government departments, powers not being in accord with
responsibilities, and the cost of law violations being too low.
A market system which allows economic levers to play a greater role in
environmental governance and ecological conservation will be developed, with a
view to addressing the slow development of market entities and market systems
and low rates of public participation in ecological conservation.
An evaluation and accountability system will be developed to assess the
performance of officials in ecological conservation and hold to account those
responsible for ecological damage. This system will be designed to be fully
reflective of resource consumption, environmental damage, and ecological
benefits, and is to be built so as to correct the shortcomings in performance
evaluations, narrow the gaps in responsibility systems, and improve poor
accountability for ecological damage.
II. Improving the System of Property Rights for Natural Resource Assets
5. Establishing a unified system for determining and registering ownership The
owners of natural resource assets of all types throughout all Chinese
territorial space will be determined in accordance with the principles that all
natural resources in China are publicly owned and all property rights are
legally prescribed. Ownership of all natural ecological spaces including water
flows, forests, mountains, grasslands, uncultivated land, and tidal flats will,
according to a unified system, be determined and registered. Clear lines will
be gradually delineated to distinguish between assets owned by the whole people
and assets collectively owned, ownership by the whole people and ownership
operated by different levels of government, and between different collective
owners. The rule of law will be strengthened in the determination and
registration of ownership.
6. Establishing a system of property rights for natural resources within which
rights and responsibilities are explicit.
A list of rights will be developed to specify the rights of ownership for all
types of natural resource assets. The relationship between ownership rights and
use rights will be properly dealt with. New forms of collective ownership and
ownership by the whole people will be created. With the exception of natural
resources which are ecologically important, the ownership rights and use rights
for all other natural resources can be separated. It will be made clear who has
the right to possess, use, benefit from, or dispose of natural resources, and
corresponding rights and responsibilities will be clarified. The right to sell,
transfer, and rent out use rights, as well as the right to use them as
collateral, as the basis of a loan guaranty, or to gain an equity stake, will
all be suitably expanded. The roles of owners and users of land on which
state-owned farms, forests, and pastures are located will be clearly defined. A
complete system for sale will be established covering all types of natural
resource assets owned by the whole people, while the uncompensated transfer of
rights or their sale at excessively low a price are to be strictly forbidden.
We will draw up an integrated plan for strengthening efforts to develop a
natural resource asset exchange.
7. Improving the state system of management for natural resource assets
In accordance with the principles of separating owners from regulators and
assigning the responsibility for one matter to one single department, the
currently diffuse duties and responsibilities of ownership of natural resource
assets owned by the whole people will be integrated, and one body will be
established to carry out the unified exercise of ownership rights for all types
of natural resources owned by the whole people, such as mineral deposits, water
flows, forests, mountains, grasslands, uncultivated land, marine areas, and
tidal flats, and take responsibility for the sale of these natural resources.
8. Exploring the establishment of a system for exercising ownership rights at
different levels
Research will be conducted to explore how a system can be put into practice in
which, in accordance with the type of resource and its importance in relation
to the ecological environment, the economy, and national defense, the central
and local governments act as the agents of the owners of natural resource
assets owned by the whole people, in order to achieve both efficiency and
equity. Resources and territorial space for which the ownership rights are
owned by the whole people and directly exercised by the Central Government will
be distinguished from those for which the ownership rights are owned by the
whole people and exercised by local governments. The Central Government will
primarily exercise directly the ownership rights for petroleum and natural gas,
valuable and rare mineral resources, key state-owned forests, major rivers and
lakes, trans-boundary rivers, ecologically important wetlands and grasslands,
marine areas, tidal flats, rare and endangered species of wild fauna and flora,
and some national parks.
9. Launching trials for determining property rights for water flows and
wetlands
Explorations will be made into establishing a water ownership system. Trials
will be carried out in determining ownership of bodies of water, coast lines,
and other aquatic ecospace. On the basis of respecting the systematic nature
and integrity of water ecosystems, the ownership rights, use rights, and
allowable volumes for water resource use will be delineated. Trials will be
launched in Gansu, Ningxia, and other areas for determining the ownership of
wetlands.
III. Establishing a System for the Development and Protection of Territorial
Space
10. Improving the functional zoning system
National and provincial-level planning of functional zones will be coordinated.
Regional policies which are based on the functional zones will be improved. On
the basis of the different functions- urban areas, primary production areas for
agricultural products, or key ecosystem service areas - adjustments and
improvements to policies regarding finance, industry, investment, population
flow, land to be used for construction, resource development, and environmental
protection will be stepped up.
11. Improving the regulatory system for the use of territorial space
The top-down land-use indices control system will be simplified and the method
of allocating indices based on administrative district and baselines for land
use will be adjusted. Development intensity indices will be broken down and
assigned to the county-level administrative districts as binding quotas to
control the total amount of land used for construction purposes. Land use regulation
will be extended to all natural ecological spaces, ecological redlines will be
defined and strictly observed, and arbitrary changes to land use will be
strictly prohibited. Efforts will be made to protect against ecological
redlines being crossed by unreasonable development and construction activities.
The monitoring system for all territorial space will be improved and a
longitudinal approach will be used to monitor changes within China's
territorial space.
12. Establishing a national park system
The protection of important ecosystems will be strengthened to ensure their
sustainable use. The system of departments independently setting up their own
nature reserves, historical and scenic sites, cultural and natural heritage
sites, geological parks, and forest parks will be reformed. These protected
areas will be reorganized by function and the scope of national parks will be
determined as appropriate. National parks will be under more stringent
protection: with the exception of improvements to the facilities used by local
people in their everyday lives and work and nature-based research, education,
and tourism which do not harm ecosystems, other types of development and
construction will be prohibited so as to protect the authenticity and integrity
of the natural ecological environment and natural and cultural heritage.
Guidance on national park trials will be strengthened, and on the basis of
these trials, research will be carried out into designing an overall plan for
establishing a national park system. A permanent mechanism will be created for
the protection of rare and endangered species of wild plants and animals.
13. Improving the system for regulating natural resources
Duties and responsibilities related to regulation of use, which are currently
spread among different departments, will be gradually concentrated within a
single department. This department will then perform all use-related regulatory
duties and responsibilities for all territorial spaces.
IV. Establishing a Planning System for Territorial Space
14. Formulating plans for territorial space
All types of current spatial plans formulated by different departments will be
integrated into unified spatial plans, which will be all-encompassing. The new
plans will be the guide for the development of the country's territorial space,
and the spatial blueprints for sustainable development; they will be the
fundamental basis for all types of development and construction programs.
Spatial plans will be divided into national, provincial, and municipal (or
county) levels (spatial plans for cities which are divided into districts will
be formulated for the district level). Research will be conducted into how to
establish unified and standardized mechanisms for formulating spatial plans. An
environmental impact assessment system will be set up to be used in spatial
planning. Provincial-level spatial planning trials are encouraged. A spatial
plan will be developed for the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.
15. Integrating municipal-level (county-level) plans
Cities and counties will be supported in combining different types of plans
into a single spatial plan, such that gradually, there will be one plan - one
blueprint - per city or county. Municipal or county spatial plans should
classify land using a unified standard, and, in accordance with the relevant
functional zoningand the requirements of the provincial-level spatial plan,
should delineate production space, living space, and ecological space,
demarcate the development boundaries of urban construction areas, industrial
areas, and rural living areas, as well as the boundaries of protected areas of
arable land, woodlands, grasslands, rivers, lakes, and wetlands, and strengthen
coordinated planning for urban subsurface space. More effective guidance will
be given to cities and counties regarding their trials for plan integration.
Research will be undertaken into developing guidelines and technical standards
for the formulation of municipal-level (county-level) spatial plans, which will
then serve as experience that can be applied elsewhere.
16. Developing new approaches for formulating municipal-level (county-level)
spatial plans
We will explore how best to standardize procedures for formulating
municipal-level (county-level) spatial plans, public participation will be
expanded, and planning will be made more effective and transparent. Those areas
piloting municipal-level (county-level) spatial plans are encouraged to
integrate planning departments, making a single department responsible for
formulating the spatial plan for that municipality or county; and they may form
a planning appraisal committee of experts and representatives of the relevant
fields. Prior to the formulation of a plan, a resource and environmental
carrying capacity assessment must be carried out, and the results of the
assessment should serve as the fundamental basis of planning. During the
process of formulation, efforts should be made to solicit opinions of those
from relevant sectors; the draft of the plan should be published in full so
that the suggestions and comments of local residents can be extensively
solicited. After evaluation and approval by the planning appraisal committee,
the plan must be deliberated and passed by the local people's congress, then
reported to the relevant government department at the next level up to be
placed on record. The finalized plan should include the text of the plan along
with precise maps and images, and should be made available to the public
through websites and other forms of local news media. Local residents are to be
encouraged to oversee the implementation of the plan and report any development
and construction activities that violate it. The local people's congress and
its standing committee will hear reports at regular intervals on the implementation
of the plan, and will hold the local government accountable for violations of
the plan.
V. Improving the Systems for Total Resource Management and Comprehensive
Resource Conservation
17. Improving the systems for providing the strictest possible protection for
farmland and securing the economical and intensive use of land
The system for the protection of basic cropland will be improved and a redline
below which the area of China' s permanent basic cropland must not fall will be
established. To ensure that the area of basic cropland are not diminished, its
quality does not deteriorate, and it is not converted to any other uses, the
duty of basic cropland protection will be assigned to farming households and
every piece of this cropland will be captured through photo-imaging and entered
into the national cropland protection database, and its strict protection will
be enforced. With the exception of unavoidable cases as specified by law in
which basic cropland has to be used as the site of key national projects, no
basic cropland may be used for construction purposes. Efforts will be redoubled
to grade and monitor as well as maintain and improve the quality of cultivated
land. The system for offsetting the occupation of cultivated land for purposes
other than cultivation will be improved. A cap will be set on total cultivated
land that can be used for new construction projects. It will be made sure that
equivalent land is offset ahead of occupation and that the replacement land is
of equal or higher grade than the cultivated land to be occupied. A cap will
also be on total land that can be occupied for construction purposes,
management will be instituted to reduce the amount of cultivatable land that is
used as such, and incentive and constraint mechanisms will be established to
encourage more economical and intensive use of land. Reasonable annual plans
will be made for the use of land, adjusting the structure of land used for
different purposes and making the best use of land that has already been made
available.
18. Improving the system for the strictest possible management of water
resources
To give priority to saving water, achieve harmony between development and water
conservation, carry out systemic governance, and ensure that both government and
market play their respective roles, the system for controlling total water
usage will be improved to ensure water security. Efforts will be accelerated to
formulate water allocation plans for major river basins, strengthen
coordination between provincial-level governments, and improve the system of
targets for control of total water usage at the provincial, municipal, and
county levels. Effective mechanisms will be established to ensure economical
and intensive water usage. More work will be done to adjust the way water
resources are used and improve their allocation. The system for evaluating the
impact of plans and construction projects on water resources will be improved.
Efforts will be made to draw principally on pricing and taxation to gradually
establish systems for controlling and instituting quota-based management of the
volume of water used in irrigation, and for controlling and instituting
quota-based management of the planned water usage of high-water-consuming
industrial enterprises. In regions seriously affected by water scarcity, water
quotas will be used as a threshold for market entry and the development of
high-water-consuming projects will be strictly controlled. The protection and
environmental restoration of areas producing aquatic products will be
strengthened, their aqua culture will be controlled, and mechanisms will be
established for the protection of aquatic plant and animal life. Regulation of
water functional zones will be improved and systems for promoting the
utilization of alternative water resources will be established.
19. Establishing a system for total energy consumption management and energy
conservation
High priority will be given to energy conservation, the control of energy
intensity will be strengthened, and the responsibility system and the system of
incentives for meeting energy conservation targets will be improved.
Improvements will be made to the energy statistics system. The management
system for energy conservation by major energy-consuming organizations will be
improved, and a mechanism for making voluntary pledges on energy conservation
will be implemented on an explorative basis. The system of energy conservation
standards will be improved to make timely updates to energy efficiency
standards for energy-consuming products, limits on energy consumption for
energy-intensive industries, and energy efficiency standards for buildings. A
reasonable target will be established for total national energy consumption and
broken down and assigned to the provincial-level and major energy-consuming
organizations. The mechanism for promoting the use of energy-saving, low-carbon
products, technologies, and equipment will be improved and lists of
technologies will be issued at regular intervals. Supervision over energy
conservation will be strengthened. Stronger support will be provided for the
development of renewable energy sources, and subsidies for all fossil fuels
will be phased out. A system for controlling total national carbon emissions
and a mechanism for breaking down the responsibility for implementation will be
gradually established. A mechanism for effectively increasing forest,
grassland, wetland, and ocean carbon sinks will be set up. China's involvement
in international cooperation on responding to climate change will be
strengthened.
20. Establishing a system for protecting virgin forests
All virgin forests will be placed under protection. A national timber forest
reserve system will be established. Government administration will be gradually
separated from the management of state-owned forests, and the public benefit
forest protection and management system will be improved for state-owned
forestry farms drawing principally on service procurement. The collective
forest tenure system will be improved. Tenure contracts for collective forests
will be kept stable, the operations allowed under these contracts will be
expanded, and the systems by which forest tenure rights are used as collateral
for loans and tenure rights are transferred will be improved.
21. Establishing a system for protecting grassland
The system by which collective grassland is contracted out for operation to
individual households will be kept stable and improved to ensure that the plot
and area of every piece of grassland contracted out is measured accurately,
contracts are signed, and contracting certificates are granted. Proper
procedures will be introduced for the transfer of grassland under such
contracts. A system for protecting basic grassland will be put into effect to
ensure that the area of basic grassland does not diminish, its quality does not
deteriorate, and it is not converted for any other use. The subsidy and award
mechanisms for the ecological conservation of grassland will be improved.
Grazing on certain areas of grassland will be banned or temporarily suspended,
rotational paddock grazing will be introduced, and efforts will be made to
strike a balance between grass and livestock. Oversight over there view and
approval of grassland requisitions will be strengthened and the use of grassland
for any purpose other than animal husbandry will be strictly controlled.
22. Establishing a system for protecting wetlands
All wetlands will be placed under protection, and the unauthorized requisition
or occupancy of wetlands of international importance, and those of national
importance, and wetland reserves will be banned. The services of wetlands will
be determined, their protection and utilization will be standardized, and a
mechanism for the ecological restoration of wetlands will be established.
23. Establishing a system for closing off desertified land for protection
Contiguous areas of desertified land for which conditions are not currently in
place to carry out anti-desertification programs will be designated as
closed-off protection zones. Systems for strict protection will be established,
construction of infrastructure needed to close off and protect and manage such
zones will be stepped up, desertified land governance will be strengthened, and
vegetation will be increased. The appropriate development of the sand industry
will be encouraged. The mechanisms for protection and management drawing
principally on service procurement will be improved. New approaches that
combine development with governance will be explored.
24. Improving the system for developing and protecting marine resources
Marine functional zones will be established, the major functions of offshore
waters and islands will be determined, and efforts will be made to guide,
control, and standardize behavior related to the use of oceans and islands. A
system will be introduced to control total sea reclamation, imposing binding
limits on the total area of ocean over which reclamation can take place. A
system will be established for maintaining natural coastlines. The system for
managing total marine fishery resources will be improved. The systems for
instituting fishing off-seasons and bans on fishing will be strictly enforced.
Limits on offshore fishing will be imposed. The scale of offshore and mudflat
aquaculture will be controlled.
25. Improving the system for managing the development and utilization of
mineral resources
A system for the investigation and evaluation of the development and
utilization of mineral resources will be established. The ascertainment and
registration of mineral resources and registration management of their
pay-per-time occupation will be strengthened. A mechanism for the intensive
development of mineral resources will be established, the concentration of
enterprises in mining areas will be increased, and large-scale development is
encouraged. National standards including those regarding the mining recovery
rate of major mineral resources, ore dressing recovery rate, and the
comprehensive utilization rate of mineral resources will be improved. The economic
policies for encouraging better utilization of mineral resources will be
refined. A system will be established to make available to the public
information on whether mining enterprises are utilizing mineral resources
efficiently and comprehensively, and a system will be set up for blacklisting
those breaking mining operation rules. The mechanism for introducing
industry-based approaches will be improved to support the recycling of major
mineral resources. The systems for protecting the geological environment in
mining areas and reclaiming deserted areas will also be improved.
26. Improving the system of resource recycling
An effective system will be established to record resource-output ratio
statistics. The extended producer responsibility (EPR) system will be put into
effect, pushing producers to perform their responsibilities for take-back and
disposal of their end-of-life products. A system will be established to utilize
farming, livestock, and aquaculture waste and achieve the organic integration
and circular development of farming, husbandry, and aquaculture. The
establishment of a system for making the separation of waste compulsory will be
accelerated. A list of renewable resources to be recycled will be worked out
and the mandatory recycling of composite packaging, batteries, agricultural
plastic sheeting, and other low-value waste will be required. Efforts will be
accelerated to develop standards for the recycling and reuse of resources by
type. A system for promoting the use of products and raw materials made of
recycled resources will be established to require enterprises consuming related
raw materials to use a certain proportion of recycled products. The system for
restricting the use of single-use disposable products will be improved. Taxation
policies will be implemented and improved to promote the comprehensive
utilization of resources and the development of the circular economy. A list of
circular economy technologies will be formulated and policies such as priority
government procurement and discounted interest on loans will be implemented.
VI. Improving the System for Payment-Based Resource Consumption and
Compensating Conservation and Protection Efforts
27. Accelerating price reform for natural resources and their products
In line with the principles of cost-benefit balancing and based on full
consideration of society' s ability to tolerate price increases, a cost
assessment mechanism for natural resource exploitation and consumption will be
established to incorporate the interests of resource owners and any ecological
and environmental damage into the pricing mechanism for natural resources and
their products. Price regulation over natural monopolies will be strengthened.
A system will be created for overseeing and reviewing the pricing cost and a
mechanism will be established for making pricing adjustments. Procedures for
decision-making on pricing and the information disclosure system will be
improved. The overall price reform of water for agricultural purposes will be
moved forward. A system of progressive pricing for water will be put into full
practice for non-household water consumption that exceeds plans or quotas for
water consumption, and a system of tiered pricing for urban household water
consumption will be fully implemented.
28. Improving the payment-based system for land use
The scope of state-owned land that is operated on the basis of a payment-based
use system will be expanded. The proportion of land for which use rights can be
transferred through bidding, auction, or listing will be enlarged. Less land
will be allocated for non-public use. Income and expenditures related to
selling use rights for state-owned land will be incorporated into public
budgeting. Industrial-land supply methods will be reformed and improved, with
the implementation of flexible transfer periods, long-term leasing,
lease-then-sell arrangements, and lease-and-sell arrangements being explored.
The mechanisms for setting and appraising land prices will be improved. The
system of grade-based pricing for land will be refined. The relationship of
land-related transaction and lease expenses with taxes and fees will be
straightened out. An effective regulatory mechanism will be put in place to
achieve reasonable price parity between industrial-use and residential-use
land. Prices of industrial-use land will be raised, and the proportion of
industrial-use land will be reduced. Methods such as land contracting and
leasing out will be explored to improve the payment-based use system for
state-owned land for agricultural use.
29. Improving the payment-based system for mineral resource use
Improvements will be made to the system for the sale of mining rights, and
means suited to a market economy and the nature of the mining industry will be
established for the sale of prospecting and extraction rights. In principle,
the sale of these rights will be market-oriented, and the income and
expenditures related to the sale of state-owned mineral resources will be
incorporated into public budgeting. The property rights of owners, investors,
and operators during the processes of payment-based acquisition, possession,
and exploitation will be clarified, and research will be conducted into the
development of a system of national premiums for the use of mineral resources.
Standard fees for the use of prospecting and extraction rights, and minimum
investment in mineral prospecting will be adjusted. Progress will be made in
building a nationally unified mining rights exchange, and efforts in
information disclosure on the sale and transfer of such rights will be
intensified.
30. Improving the payment-based system for use of sea areas and offshore
islands
A mechanism will be created for adjusting use fees for sea areas and
uninhabited islands. An effective system will be established for the sale of
use rights for sea areas and uninhabited islands through bidding, auction, and
listing.
31. Accelerating reform of resource and environmental taxes and fees
The taxes and fees for natural resources and their products will be straightened
out, their respective purposes will be clarified, and the appropriate scope of
taxation regulation will be defined. Faster progress will be made in
introducing price-based on resources. The scope of resource taxes will be
gradually expanded to cover the use of all kinds of ecological spaces. A trial
reform will be carried out in parts of northern China to levy a resource tax on
groundwater. The development of legislation on environmental protection tax
will also be accelerated.
32. Improving the ecological compensation system
Explorations will be made into establishing a diversified compensation
mechanism, transfer payments to major ecological functional zones will be
increased step by step, and the incentive mechanism that links ecological protection
performance with fund allocation will be improved. Measures will be drawn up
for implementing a mechanism, principally for local compensation, and supported
by additional funds from the central budget, by which local governments
compensate each other for ecological or environmental damage and ecological
conservation efforts. Local governments are encouraged to launch ecological
compensation trials. Efforts will continue in carrying out the ecological
compensation pilot initiative for the Xin' an River ecosystem. Help will be
given to carry out trans-regional ecological compensation pilot initiatives in
the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei water source conservation area, in areas along the
Jiuzhou River in Guangxi and Guangdong, and in areas along the Ting and Han
rivers in Fujian and Guangdong. Explorations will be made into carrying out
pilot ecological compensation initiatives in the Yangtze River basin- an
environmentally sensitive region.
33. Improving the mechanism for utilizing ecological protection and restoration
funds
Given the need for systematic governance of mountains, forests, farmland,
rivers, and lakes, the measures for utilizing and managing relevant funds will
be improved and existing policies and channels will be integrated. At the same
time as efforts are being made to comprehensively improve the conditions of
rivers throughout their entire drainage basins,more funds will be spent on the
protection and restoration of national ecological-security shields, such as the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau ecological shield, the Loess Plateau-Sichuan-Yunnan
ecological shield, the northeast China forest belt, the northern China
desertification-prevention belt, and the southern China mountainous belt.
34. Creating a recuperation system for farmland, grasslands, rivers, and lakes
A recuperation plan will be formulated for farmland, grassland, rivers, and
lakes, adjusting the use of farmland in areas where there is heavy pollution or
where groundwater has been over-extracted. Basic agricultural activity from
land sloped greater than 25 degrees, which is not suitable for, and the
ecosystem of which is harmed by, cultivation, will be gradually excluded from
classification as basic cropland. A permanent mechanism will be formulated to
consolidate progress in returning farmland to forest and grassland and
converting grazing land back into grassland. Pilot projects will be launched to
return cultivated land to lakes and wetlands. Efforts will be made to move
forward with the pilot initiative for the restoration of heavy-metal
contaminated soil in the Changsha-Zhuzhou-Xiangtan region, as well as the pilot
project to comprehensively deal with the over-extraction of groundwater in
northern China.
VII. Establishing an Effective System for Environmental Governance
35. Improving the pollutant emissions permit system
A unified and fair business emissions permit system covering all fixed
pollution sources will be established quickly nationwide. Emissions permits
will be issued in accordance with the law. Emission of pollutants without a
permit or in violation of a permit will be prohibited.
36. Establishing a mechanism for cooperation within a region in pollution
prevention and control
Cooperative mechanisms for joint prevention and control of air pollution will
be improved in major areas such as the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the
Yangtze River Delta, and the Pearl River Delta. Regional cooperation mechanisms
will be established in other areas, taking into consideration their
geographical features, levels of pollution, distribution of urban space, and
patterns of pollutant transmission. Trials for creating new administrative
systems for environmental protection will be held in some areas, using unified
plans, standards, environmental evaluations, monitoring, and law enforcement. Trials
will also be launched for the establishment of environmental regulators and
administrative law enforcement agencies for river basins. A variety of
cooperative mechanisms for protecting the water environments of river basins as
well as early-warning systems for risk control will be put in place with the
participation of the relevant provincial-level water-related departments within
each river basin. An integrated mechanism for pollution prevention and control
both on land and at sea and a control system governing the total quantity of
pollutants discharged into key marine areas will be set up. The mechanism for
responding to environmental emergencies will be improved and China' s capacity
for dealing with environmental emergencies of varying degrees of severity and
involving different pollutants will be strengthened.
37. Establishing systems and mechanisms for rural environmental governance
An eco-oriented system of agricultural subsidies will be created. Efforts to
formulate and improve relevant technical standards and specifications will be
accelerated. Reductions to the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and
plastic sheeting and the recycling or safe disposal of animal husbandry waste
will be carried out quickly. The production and use of biodegradable plastic
sheeting is encouraged. The system for comprehensively utilizing crop straw
will be improved. Networks for recycling, storing, transporting, and processing
plastic sheeting and chemical fertilizer and pesticide packaging will be
improved. Development of environmental protection facilities, such as those for
handling rural wastewater and refuse, will be bolstered by subsidies from
governments and village collectives, fee payments from residents, and the
participation of non-government capital. A variety of assistive measures,
including government procurement of services, will be adopted to foster and
develop market entities for the control of all types of agricultural pollution
from non-point sources and for the handling of rural wastewater and refuse.
County- and township-level governments will carry greater responsibility for
environmental protection, and efforts to build their capacity for environmental
regulation will be boosted. In allocating government funds for supporting
agriculture, full consideration should be given to improving overall
agricultural production capacity and to preventing and controlling rural
pollution.
38. Improving systems for public disclosure of environmental information
Extensive efforts will be made to ensure public availability of environmental
information pertaining to the atmosphere, water, and so on, to businesses that
emit pollution, and to regulatory bodies. The mechanism for the public release
of environmental impact evaluations for development projects will be improved.
The environmental spokesperson system will be refined. Efforts will be made to
promote awareness for environmental protection among the general public, the
system of public participation will be improved, and more work needs to be done
to ensure that the people exercise oversight over the environment in a legal
and orderly way. An online platform and system will be created for the
reporting of offenses related to environmental protection, and systems for
offense-reporting, hearings, and public opinion-based oversight will be
improved.
39. Strictly implementing compensation systems for ecological and environmental
damage
Manufacturers' legal responsibilities for environmental protection will be
tightened, and the cost of illegal activities will be significantly increased.
Legal provisions concerning environmental damage compensation, methods for
appraising damage, and mechanisms for enforcing compensation will be improved.
In accordance with the law, penalties will be meted out to those who violate
environmental laws and regulations, compensation for ecological and
environmental damage will be determined by the extent of damage and other
factors, and when violations result in serious adverse consequences, criminal
liability will be pursued.
40. Improving the administrative system for environmental protection
An effective administrative system for environmental protection will be
established to strictly regulate the emissions of all pollutants. Duties and
responsibilities for environmental protection, which are currently spread
across departments, will be assigned to one single department, progressively
creating a system whereby one department is responsible for unified regulation
and administrative law enforcement over urban and rural environmental
protection work. Regulatory authority from different fields and departments and
at different levels will be systemically organized to create a unified and
authoritative system for environmental law enforcement, strengthen the ranks of
law enforcement, and provide those tasked with environmental law enforcement
the necessary conditions and means to enforce the law. The mechanisms linking
administrative law enforcement and environmental judicial work will be
improved.
VIII. Improving the Market System for Environmental Governance and Ecological
Conservation
41. Fostering market entities for environmental governance and ecological
conservation
Systems, mechanisms, policies, and measures that encourage energy efficient and
environmentally friendly industries will be adopted. Regulations and practices
that hinder fair competition and the creation of a nationally unified market
will be discontinued, and all types of investment will be encouraged to enter
the environmental protection market. Non-government investors may participate
in the development and operation of any environmental governance or ecological
conservation program where cooperation between government and non-government
investment is viable. By means of government procurement of services and other
methods, more support will be provided for third-party governance of
environmental pollution. The transformation of organizations in charge of the
operation and management of wastewater and refuse treatment facilities into
companies that exercise independent accounting and management will be
accelerated. Companies that take investment from or are operated with state
capital will be set up or created through reorganization in order to encourage
greater investment of state capital into environmental governance and
ecological conservation. Support will be given to state-owned firms in fields
of ecological and environmental protection to reform toward a mixed-ownership
system.
42. Promoting the trading of energy-use rights and carbon emissions rights
Combined with efforts to see that major energy-consuming organizations increase
energy efficiency and to subject new projects to energy reviews, the trading of
energy saved on projects will be allowed, and will progressively move toward
the trading of energy-use rights based on the cap system for energy
consumption. A trading system and a measurement and verification system for
energy-use rights will be established. Energy performance contracting will be
promoted. Trials of carbon emissions rights trading will be deepened, a
national exchange for carbon emissions rights will be progressively created,
and a national plan for setting the total trade and quota allocation of carbon
emissions rights will be formulated. The carbon trading registration system
will be improved and a regulatory system will be established for the carbon
emissions rights exchange.
43. Promoting the trading of pollution rights
On the basis of the cap system for enterprise pollution emissions, improvements
will be made as quickly as possible to the granting of initial pollution
rights, and coverage will be expanded to include more pollutants. Working from
the foundations provided by the current mechanism for granting pollution rights
to administrative regions, and on the basis of the best industry-wide levels of
pollution emissions, the mechanism will be gradually strengthened to ensure the
cap system for enterprise pollution emissions is implemented and the trading of
pollution rights creates incentives for emissions reductions at the level of
the individual enterprise. In key river basins and key areas for air pollution,
implementation of pollution rights trading across administrative regions will
be carried out as appropriate. Trials for the payment-based use and trading of
pollution rights will be expanded to include more areas where conditions are
appropriate. Efforts will be stepped up to improve the pollution rights
exchange. Regulations will be developed on granting pollution rights,
collecting and using pollution rights use fees, and setting trading prices.
44. Promoting the trading of water rights
Combined with efforts to establish an effective mechanism for compensating the
expenses of water ecosystem protection and conservation, water-related rights
will be appropriately defined and allocated and ways of trading water rights
between regions, between river basins, between the lower and upper reaches of
rivers, between industries, and between water users will be explored. Research
will be conducted into formulating regulations concerning the trading of water
rights, to clearly define the scope and types of tradable water rights, the
trading entities and time frames, the mechanisms for determining trading
prices, and the rules for the operation of the exchange. An exchange for water
rights will be developed.
45. Establishing a green finance system
Green credit will be promoted, with research being undertaken into adopting
methods such as government interest subsidies to boost the level of support.
All types of financial institutions are encouraged to step up grants of green
loans. Requirements for the due diligence of borrowers as well as their legal
responsibilities concerning environmental protection will be clarified. Efforts
will be stepped up to further develop the systems related to capital markets.
Research will be conducted to explore the establishment of a green stock index
and the development of relevant investment products, and studies will be
undertaken to explore the issuance of green bonds by banks and enterprises,
encouraging the securitization of green credit assets. Support will be given
for the launch of multiple types of green development funds, the operations of
which will be market-based. A mechanism will be established for the mandatory
release of environmental protection information by listed companies. Guaranty
mechanisms for energy-efficient, low-carbon, and environmentally friendly
projects will be improved, and the level of risk compensation increased. A
compulsory liability insurance system for environmental pollution will be
established in sectors involving high environmental risks. A green rating
system as well as a non-profit system for calculating environmental costs and
evaluating environmental impact will be established. Cooperation of all types
with other countries will be promoted in green finance.
46. Establishing a unified system for green products
Products that are licensed as environmentally friendly, energy-efficient,
water-saving, circular, low-carbon, recyclable, or organic will be uniformly
classified as green products, and standardized green product standards,
certifications, and logos will be established for them. Improvements will be
made to policies on fiscal and tax support and government procurement for the
research and development, production, transport, delivery, purchase, and use of
green products.
IX. Improving Ecological Conservation Performance Evaluation and Accountability
Systems
47. Establishing ecological conservation targets
Research will be conducted into developing practicable and visually
representable indicators for assessing green development. Measures will be put
in place to evaluate the attainment of ecological conservation targets, and
indicators for resource consumption, environmental damage, and ecological
benefit will be incorporated into a comprehensive evaluation system for
economic and social development. Different performance evaluation criteria will
be applied to different regions on the basis of their functional zoning.
48. Establishing monitoring and early-warning mechanisms for environmental and
resource carrying capacity
Research will be undertaken into developing indicators and applying the right
technology for monitoring and producing early warnings about resource and
environmental carrying capacity. Monitoring and early-warning databases and IT
platforms will be created for resources and the environment. Reports on
monitoring and early-warning about resource and environmental carrying capacity
will be prepared at regular intervals, and warnings will be issued and measures
taken to place restrictions on regions which have exceeded or are approaching
their carrying capacity in terms of resource consumption and environmental
capacity.
49. Exploring the creation of balance sheets for natural resource assets Guidelines
will be formulated on preparing balance sheets for natural resource assets.
Asset and liability accounting methods will be developed for use with water,
land, forest, and other types of resources; accounts will be established for
accounting natural resources in physical terms; classificatory criteria and
statistical standards will be clearly laid out; and changes in natural resource
assets will be regularly assessed. The preparation of balance sheets for
natural resource assets will take place on a trial basis at the municipal
(county) level, with physical accounts of major natural resource assets being
assessed and results released.
50. Auditing outgoing officials' management of natural resource assets
On the basis of the preparation of balance sheets for natural resource assets
and making reasonable allowance for objective natural factors, active efforts
will be made to explore the objectives, content, methods, and appraisal
indicators for auditing outgoing officials' management of natural resource
assets. Based on the changes in natural resource assets within their area of
jurisdiction during their term of office, through auditing, an objective
evaluation will be carried out of the outgoing official's management of natural
resource assets; an official' s liability will be determined in accordance with
the law, and auditing results will be put to better use. Trials for preparing
balance sheets for natural resource assets and for audits of the management of
natural resource assets by outgoing officials will be conducted in the cities
of Hulun Buir in Inner Mongolia, Huzhou in Zhejiang, Loudi in Hunan, Chishui in
Guizhou, and Yan' an in Shaanxi.
51. Establishing a lifelong accountability system for ecological and
environmental damage
Leaders of local CPC committees and governments will be responsible for both
economic development and ecological progress. On the basis of the results of
the natural resource asset audits of outgoing officials and ecological and
environmental damage, the circumstances under which the principal leaders of
local CPC committees and governments, related leaders, and departmental leaders
will be held accountable and the procedures for confirming accountability will
be made clear. Those responsible for ecological and environmental damage will,
on the basis of the severity of misconduct, be reprimanded, required to make a
public apology, or dealt with through organizational, Party, or disciplinary
action. For circumstances which constitute a criminal act, criminal liability
will be pursued in accordance with the law. A system of lifelong accountability
will be put into effect for major ecological and environmental damage which
becomes apparent after an official has left office and for which he or she is
found liable. A national supervision and inspection system for environmental
protection will be established.
X. Ensuring Successful Implementation of the Reform to Promote Ecological
Progress
52. Strengthening leadership over the reform to promote ecological progress
All local governments and departments need to study the central leadership' s
guiding principles on making ecological progress and carrying out reform to
this effect, develop a deep understanding of the tremendous significance of
this reform, and strengthen their sense of responsibility, sense of purpose,
and sense of urgency over its implementation. Local governments and departments
need to do their utmost to put into effect the policy decisions and
arrangements of the CPC Central Committee and the State Council and see to it
that all objectives contained within this reform plan are carried out quickly.
In accordance with the requirements set out in this plan, all government
departments concerned should promptly draw up plans for implementing each item
of the reform, delegate responsibility and set time frames, and through close
cooperation and collaboration with others create a concerted reform effort.
53. Launching pilot initiatives and explorative projects
Both the central and local governments will play an active role. All local
governments are encouraged, in line with the direction of reform set out in
this plan, to proactively explore and move forward with the reform to promote
ecological progress, treating their local conditions as their point of
departure and the solving of serious ecological and environmental problems as
their target. Reforms that require legal authorization should be handled in
accordance with statutory procedures. Comprehensive pilot initiatives for
achieving ecological progress being conducted independently by different
government departments will be incorporated into national pilot initiatives and
explorative projects and will receive guidance and encouragement from those
authorities whose own functions put them in a position to provide such support.
54. Improving laws and regulations
Legislative support will be provided for the reform to promote ecological
progress through the development of effective laws and regulations on property
rights for natural resource assets, the development and protection of
territorial space, national parks, spatial planning, seas, responses to climate
change, protection of cropland quality, water conservation and groundwater
management, grassland and wetland preservation, pollutant emission permits, and
compensation for ecological and environmental damage.
55. Improving guidance on public communication
Publicity both in China and abroad on efforts to promote ecological progress
and carry out the reform to this effect will be stepped up. This will require
coordinated planning and accurate interpretations of each of the systems and
the direction of reform-all designed to promote ecological progress. It should
cultivate and popularize eco-culture, raise public awareness about ecological
progress, and advocate a green life-style, thereby creating a positive social
atmosphere in which efforts to promote eco-progress are viewed with respect,
and which will help to promote ecological progress and the reform designed to
bring about it.
56. Exercising stricter supervision over reform implementation
The office of the Central Leading Group for Comprehensively Deepening Reform
and the leading group' s Reform Taskforce for the Promotion of Economic
Development and Ecological Progress should strengthen its overall coordination,
carry out follow-up analyses and supervisory inspections over the
implementation of this plan, accurately interpret and promptly resolve any
problems arising during its implementation, and promptly report any major
issues to the CPC Central Committee and the State Council.