I picked this up through Twitter
Wuhan residents protested the construction of a waste-to-energy plant, repeating a pattern seen elsewhere in China in recent years.
Environmental Protest Breaks out in China’s Wuhan City
Wuhan residents protested the construction of a waste-to-energy plant, repeating a pattern seen elsewhere in China in recent years.
4
July, 2019
On
June 28, residents of the Yangluo residential district in the central
Chinese city of Wuhan took to the streets to protest the construction
of a waste-to-energy plant in the district. The protests, which
occurred outside the city government’s offices, were met with a
large contingent of regular and riot police, according to pictures
and comments circulated on Weibo, and the violent response of the
police was widely condemned by netizens.
Wuhan,
like many cities in China, faces a waste disposal problem, as growing
urbanization leads to dense population centers with little room for
refuse. Wuhan’s city message board contains several complaints
about smells emanating from the landfill currently located in
Yangluo, as well as concerns about the construction of the new
landfills. Waste management problems have sometimes been fatal: in
2015, at
least 69 people were
killed by the collapse of a mountain of construction debris and waste
in Shenzhen.
Waste-to-energy
conversion plants purport to provide an answer to these concerns. The
plants, which burn trash to produce electricity, have been celebrated
as a source of renewable energy. In Sweden, which incinerates
50 percent of
its waste, less than 1 percent of waste ends in up in landfills,
reducing methane emissions. However, while the plants provide a
solution to waste management, they can come with a significant
cost in
terms of emissions. The Wheelabrator plant near New York City
releases 577 millions pounds of carbon dioxide annually, in addition
to significant quantities of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, and
sulfur dioxide.
The
Chenjiachong waste-to-energy plant, built at the site of an existing
landfill, will
cost 199
million yuan (roughly $29 million) and, according to city planning
documents, will process 2,000 tons of waste per day. The plant will
be the sixth waste-to-energy plant in the city, and is part of a
larger project to create a “circular economy” industrial park in
the zone. A 2015 study in the International
Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health found
that past
waste incineration projects were plagued by several problems,
including the “illegal construction of waste incineration plants
close residential areas,” manipulation of the assessment process,
limited public participation, and failure of the Wuhan Municipal
government to properly enforce disposal standards. One waste
incineration plant currently operating in Wuhan, Guodingshan is
located just 100 meters from apartment buildings. According to the
authors, none of the plants would pass an environmental impact
assessment.
Previous
action to stop the construction of waste-to-energy plants has been
largely unsuccessful. In 2017, Shenzhen residents sued over
the construction of a waste-to-energy plant. Although the Shenzhen
Intermediate People’s court ruled for the release of the
environmental impact assessment and other planning documents,
construction began when the Shenzhen government appealed the
decision. In Xiaotou, a small city about 100 km from Wuhan,
construction of a waste-to-energy plant was halted in 2016
after residents
took to the streetsin
protest, but construction on the site resumed again in 2018, with the
first phase completed in
January of this year.
Residents
have good reason to be concerned about the construction of the
Chenjiachong plant in particular. Those concerns are delineated in
a letter allegedly
written by representatives of the Yangluo community and posted on the
“Wuhan Top Headlines” Weibo account (the post was blocked or
deleted after June 28, but reposted on
July 1). Concerns include the capability of the company itself and
the placement of the plant, which is located just 800 meters from
some residences, rather than the minimum 1.5 km recommended
by publicly
available plans for
the area.
The
letter notes that the company given the contract for the project,
Wuhan Huaneng Rongcheng Renewable Resources Co., Ltd. (a state-owned
enterprise), was only created on April 17, 2019, just
two days before
Yangtze New City, the group operating a larger circular economy,
filed the project. City records show that name approval for Wuhan
Huaneng Rongcheng was
granted on
April 11, 2019. The selection of such a new company for the project
is particularly strange given that there are well-established
companies (CCEPC and Kaidi)
in Wuhan already operating waste-to-energy plants. Construction of
the plant, which appears to have prompted Thursday’s protests,
began two months earlier than indicated by the project plan,
prompting fears that the company and the government sought to achieve
a fait
accompli.
Videos
and comments circulating on Weibo show hundreds of riot police and
suggest that police beat protesters (including the elderly). Echoing
climate change protests worldwide, young people played a central role
in the protest. Several widely shared photos and videos from the
protest show a young boy encouraging the protesters over a megaphone.
By Sunday, the topic had been viewed by over 231 million Weibo users,
at which point it was removed from “hot searches” on Weibo. The
topic is not entirely blocked, but users report blocking of
individual posts. A post by the district government states that given
public opposition, the project will not start. However, criticism
over police brutality in response to the protests has continued and
posts on Weibo suggest that protests lasted for a third day.
Media
and legal experts interviewed by a local media company echoed many of
the protesters’ concerns, noting that the protests stemmed from a
lack of transparency and community consultation. While commentators
generally suggested that the project was necessary, they highlighted
the need for better education of the people and greater public
communication. Ding Gaobo, a former CCTV reporter, said that if the
government can’t prove their ability to supervise pollution by
actions and in fact, it will be difficult to persuade the people to
agree with the plant, because there is no guarantee that pollution
will not hurt future generations.
Netizens
generally expressed their support for the protesters, noting that the
government had been unresponsive to the concerns of the local people
and that the government used excessive use of force in response to
the protesters.
Both netizens and Yangluo residents emphasized that
their requests were modest: they were not objecting to the
construction of the plant, they just wanted it moved farther away
from their homes. While some held out hope for a satisfactory answer
from the government, the government’s lack of commitment to serving
the people was also frequently condemned. One comment on Weibo reads,
“These people are not terrorists, they are just people who are just
trying to keep their country from stinking, trying to preserve the
health of the next generation living on this land, trying to defend
their own rights and interests. Trying to give a statement to the
government, the government suppressed them with arms.”
Kendra
Brock holds an MA in International Relations and Diplomacy from Seton
Hall University. She taught at Wuhan Polytechnic University in Wuhan,
China for three years.
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