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Environmental impact assessment in the People's Republic of China
Authors:Robert B. Wenger  Wang Huadong  Ma Xiaoying
Affiliation:(1) College of Environmental Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, 54311-7001 Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA;(2) Institute of Environmental Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijung, People's Republic of China;(3) Present address: College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, 13210 Syracuse, New York, USA
Abstract:Environmental impact assessment (EIA) procedures have been in existence in the People's Republic of China over the last decade. The impetus for China's introduction of EIA was provided by the Environmental Protection Law of the People's Republic of China, which was adopted by the Fifth National People's Congress in 1979. The EIA process, which is administrative and not statutorily mandated, has been applied primarily to construction projects. Four stages are typically involved in an EIA investigation: design of the investigation, evaluation of background environmental quality, prediction of environmental impacts, and an assessment and analysis of the environmental impacts. A variety of approaches is used for predicting and analyzing environmental impacts, ranging from ad hoc methods to fairly sophisticated mathematical models. The results of the EIA investigation are compiled in an environmental impact statement, which is used as the basis for decision making by personnel in environmental protection departments. The EIA process does not include provisions for citizen notification or involvement. Views differ concerning the effectiveness of the EIA program in protecting China's natural, social, and cultural environments. Some hold that the EIA program has brought about improvement in environmental protection, while critics contend that the program has had little effect in the prevention of pollution. However, most, if not all, observers seem to feel that the program should be continued and improved. A major avenue for improvement is to place the evaluation of a particular project in a regional context. An earlier version of this paper was distributed at a workshop on Environmental Assessment Development Planning held in conjunction with the VII Annual Meeting of the International Association for Impact Assessment, Brisbane, Australia, July 5–8, 1988.
Keywords:EIA process  EIA methods  Environmental impact statement  Effectiveness of EIA  People's Republic of China
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