文章预览
As a volunteer and resident of Mianbei Village in eastern Shanghai, 68-year-old retired worker Zhu Minghua dedicates two days each week to patrolling the area’s river channels. Zhu is a part of China’s “river chief” system, first established in the early 2000s as a framework specifically to tackle water pollution in two rivers in Changxing County in the neighboring Zhejiang province. At the time, efforts included dredging and purifying the waterways and removing illegal structures along the riverbanks. The system then garnered widespread attention in May 2007 following a significant pollution-related blue-green algae bloom in the eastern Jiangsu province’s Taihu Lake, outside of Wuxi. In response, the Wuxi municipal government explicitly tied river management to the performance evaluations of local government officials. Environmental conditions in the Taihu Lake region gradually improved thanks to Jiangsu province’s successful implementation of the river chief system. In 20
………………………………