china | Policy design

Small but Effective Moves towards A Greener China

Ten years ago, there was hardly any environmental enforcement by civil society or by the markets in China. In 1999–2000, the World Bank collaborated on a pilot programme with the Chinese Academy of Environmental Planning, Nanjing University, the Zhenjiang Environmental Protection Bureau in Jiangsu Province and the Hohhot Academy of Environmental Sciences in Inner Mongolia.

This experiment, aimed at publicizing information about environmental performance, was run in Hohhot and Zhenjiang. Although the programme was halted at the end of the pilot phase in Hohhot, it was sustained in Zhenjiang. Despite the top leadership’s intention to clean up China’s environment, the evaluation system is biased towards economic development. A push from the bottom is badly needed to attract the attention of local governments to the environment. The Pollution Information Transparency Index now has wide geographical coverage, and efforts are continuing by the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs in Beijing. So we have every reason to look forward to more informed public participation in environmental issues, stimulating local governments to embark on a path to a greener China.

EfD Authors

  • Assistant Professor Wanxin Li Research associate

Keywords

Centers

  • china

Type of publication

  • Peer reviewed

Reference

Wanxin Li (2009), "Small but Effective Moves towards A Greener China", Nature Vol. 460, No. 7256, 683-684

Publications

EfD Newsletter

Subscribe to our Newsletter service

Join or share



Follow EfD on Twitter
Join EfD on LinkedInJoin EfD on LinkedIn

See Also

Impacts of Policy Measures on the Development of State-Owned Forests in Northeastern China: [...]

State-owned forest enterprises (SOFEs) in northeast China and Inner Mongolia play important [cont...]

The Use of Hypothetical Baselines in Stated Preference Surveys

Researchers using stated preference (SP) techniques have increasingly come to rely on what we call [cont...]