China’s environmental protection includes laws, administrative regulations, local regulations, departmental rules and provincial government rules. It also includes national standards (Guo Biao, or GB), industry standards (Hángyè Guīfàn, or HJ) and local standards (Dìfāng Biāozhǔn, or DB).
Environmental laws have formed a system using the framework “1+N+4”, as follows.
At the same time, the State Council also issued the Regulations on Environmental Protection of Construction Projects, the Regulations on Sewage Disposal Permits, etc. The provincial and city-level People’s Congress and its standing committee have also formulated local environmental protection regulations. Additionally, there are many standards related to environmental management and pollutant discharge limits.
The Supreme People’s Court can issue judicial interpretations on how the law is to be applied. Since 2023, the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate have updated the “Interpretation of Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in Handling Criminal Cases of Environmental Pollution”, the “Interpretation of Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law to the Trial of Cases of Disputes Over Liability for Ecological and Environmental Tort”, and issued “Several Provisions of the Supreme People’s Court Concerning Evidence in Civil Litigation for Ecological and Environmental Tort”.
In 2024, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress officially launched the compilation work of the Ecological Environment Code. It will systematically integrate, compile and revise the existing ecological environment legal systems and will be submitted for deliberation within one year.
The Ministry of Ecology and Environment (MEE) manages and supervises the environmental protection work of the whole country. At the same time, it retains the National Nuclear Safety Administration and establishes the National Office for the Import and Export of Ozone-Depleting Substances. The MEE’s main responsibilities include tackling climate change and the usual environmental supervision.
At the local level, the Environmental Protection Law stipulates that the local people’s governments should be responsible for the environmental quality of their own region. The Ecological and Environmental Department (EED), above the county level, should manage and supervise the environmental and ecological work of the entire region.
Central Environmental Protection Inspection System
There is a major system for promoting ecological civilisation and eco-environmental protection. The Central Ecological Environment Protection Inspection Group is an organisation formed and approved by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the State Council to undertake specific ecological environment protection inspection tasks.
It mainly supervises local CPC committees and local governments, departments with important eco-environmental protection responsibilities, and relevant enterprises whose production and business activities have a significant impact on the ecological environment. Supervision is carried out once every five years.
Environmental protection inspection mainly focuses on three aspects:
In addition to the central environmental protection inspections, environmental protection inspection mechanisms have also been established at the provincial level.
State Departments
There are many departments responsible for environmental protection, such as:
The Environmental Protection Law is the primary law, with other specific environmental laws covering particular environmental assets (see 1.1 Environmental Protection Policies, Principles and Laws). In addition, the Wildlife Protection Law of China came into force on 1 May 2023 in order to protect wildlife, save precious and endangered wildlife, maintain biodiversity and ecological balance, and promote harmonious coexistence between humans and nature.
On 18 October 2023, the Supreme People’s Court released ten typical cases of judicial protection of national parks. Adhering to the principle of the strictest rule of law, whereby the illegal exploitation of national strategic resources is severely punished within the range of legal penalties, the court strictly controls the application of probation – with the development and utilisation of judicial resources. In civil public interest litigation cases of ecological damage, even though the perpetrators have been sentenced to criminal liability, they have also been seriously pursued for civil liability. This reflects the principles of accountability for damage and the strictest rule of law. These cases provide reference for subsequent cases.
The penalties for violating the Environmental Protection Law and related laws depend on the consequences of the offence. If it constitutes a criminal offence, criminal liability will be pursued in accordance with the law. If it does not yet constitute a crime, it will be punished in accordance with the Administrative Penalties Law and the Measures on Administrative Penalties for the Ecological Environment. (For more details, please refer to 5.1 Key Types of Liability.)
According to the Civil Code, pollution of the environment and damage to the ecology are subject to tort liability. This includes stopping the infringement, removing obstructions, eliminating dangers, repairing the ecological environment, and apologising and compensating for damages. (For more details, please refer to 5.1 Key Types of Liability.)
MEE and EED investigators have the right to:
When facing government inspection, dishonesty or obstructing law enforcement will be fined by the EED. This is required across the entire environmental law system, including Article 98 of the Law on the Prevention and Control of Air Pollution, Article 81 of the Law on the Prevention and Control of Water Pollution, and Article 103 of the Solid Waste Law.
Approval of Environmental Impact Assessments
According to the Environmental Impact Assessment Law and the Regulations on the Environmental Protection Management of Construction Projects, construction projects that may cause significant or mild environmental impacts must carry out environmental impact assessments (EIAs) and compile EIA reports (forms), and obtain approval from the local EED or the MEE.
Pollutant Discharge Permits
Discharges based on the Regulation on the Administration of Pollutant Discharge Permits (PDPs) are officially implemented. Pollutant-discharging industries are required to obtain a PDP or carry out emissions registration before the emissions/waste are discharged.
Drainage Permit
According to the Regulations on Urban Drainage and Sewage Treatment, enterprises, institutions and individual industrial and commercial households engaged in industrial, construction, catering, medical and other activities need to apply to urban drainage authorities for a drainage permit if they discharge sewage into urban drainage pipelines. This permit is issued by a construction authority rather than the EED. Drainage permits are valid for five years.
X-Ray Radiation Safety Licence
According to the Regulations on the Safety and Protection of Radioisotopes and Radiation Devices, an enterprise that produces, sells and uses radiation and radiological devices must obtain a Radiation Safety Licence in accordance with the provisions therein. The licence is valid for five years.
Hazardous Waste Business Licence
According the Solid Waste Law, enterprises engaged in collecting, storing, utilising and disposing of hazardous waste should apply for a Hazardous Waste Business Licence or a Hazardous Waste Collection Licence, in accordance with relevant state regulations. The former is valid for five years and the latter for three years.
The regulatory approach includes environmental permits, environmental administrative supervision and inspection, and environmental administrative penalties. Environmental permit refers to an administrative decision made by an environmental law enforcement agency (in response to the application by an individual or organisation), after examination, to permit or not permit the applicant to engage in a certain activity.
Environmental administrative supervision and inspection refer to actions taken by the environmental law enforcement agencies in order to achieve the function of environmental management. The administrative counterpart is whether environmental protection laws and regulations and specific administrative requirements are being complied with.
An environmental administrative penalty is an administrative sanction imposed by a specific environmental law enforcement agency on a citizen or organisation that violates environmental laws and regulations. It is divided into behavioural penalties, property penalties, and warnings.
Article 9 of the Administrative Licensing Law stipulates that administrative licences obtained in accordance with the law shall not be transferred, except for those that are transferable in accordance with legal conditions and procedures as stipulated by laws and regulations. The main exceptions are:
Administrative Penalties
Violations of environmental permits or approvals can lead to administrative penalties imposed by the environmental protection authorities. These penalties may include fines, warnings, or orders to cease operations or rectify the violations. (For more details, see 5.1 Key Types of Liability.)
Revocation or Suspension of Permits
Environmental authorities may revoke or suspend the permits or approvals for the specific activity that led to the violation. This can effectively shut down the operation until compliance is achieved.
Criminal Charges
In cases of severe violations, such as illegal discharges of hazardous pollutants or in the event of significant harm to the environment, individuals or entities responsible may face criminal charges. This can result in imprisonment and substantial fines. (For more details, see 5.1 Key Types of Liability.)
Environmental Remediation or Compensation
Violators may be required to remediate environmental damage or pay compensation for environmental damage caused by their actions. This may include the cost of environmental restoration or remediation.
China’s environmental legal liability includes criminal liability, administrative liability and civil liability. The subject of liability includes enterprises, enterprise managers and individuals that commit pollution damage acts.
Environmental Criminal Liability
Environmental criminal liability mainly includes the following crimes:
According to the Amendment to the Criminal Law (XI), enterprises or enterprise managers may be the criminal subjects of organising or carrying out serious environmental pollution. Generally, the enterprises will be criminally fined, whereas individual crimes will be sentenced to less than seven years’ imprisonment and fined. However, the imprisonment can increase to a maximum of 15 years if the following illegal acts occur and cause serious environmental consequences:
The Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate updated the Interpretation of Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in Handling Criminal Cases of Environmental Pollution, which entered into force on 15 August 2023. The conviction and sentencing standards for environmental pollution crimes were adjusted. The statutory penalties for the crime of polluting the environment were also adjusted from the original two grades to three grades and the criteria for ascending grades of sentencing were amended and improved. The rules for dealing with the behaviour of environmental data falsification were clarified, as were the rules of leniency and severity in handling criminal cases of environmental pollution.
Environmental Administrative Liability
Environmental administrative liability for environmental damage mainly involves administrative penalties and administrative compulsory enforcement measures. The Administrative Penalties Law and the Measures on Administrative Penalties for the Ecological Environment stipulate the types of administrative punishments, including:
According to the Administrative Penalties Law, an administrative authority may seek penalties against a citizen, legal person or another organisation for violation of the administrative order in accordance with the law by reducing rights and interests or increasing obligations – for example, a fine, or confiscation of illegal gains and illegal property. According to the Environmental Protection Law, those who fail to rectify the illegality within the timeframe imposed may also be fined per day, which could significantly increase the penalty.
If the violation is serious, the licence may be temporarily detained, and the level of qualification could be lowered or revoked. Other options are restricting production and business operation or ordering the suspension of production or business operation, as well as closing down and administrative detention (the last being a punishment measure imposed on the main person in charge).
In addition to the Administrative Penalties Law, the MEE has promulgated the Measures on Administrative Penalties for Ecological Environment, which stipulate the process of imposing administrative penalties. (For more details, see 3.2 Breaching Protections.)
Besides administrative penalties, enterprises committing illegal acts may also face administrative compulsory enforcement measures such as sealing up and confiscating the property.
Environmental Civil Liability
Environmental civil liability primarily refers to the liability for environmental pollution and ecological damage. According to the Civil Code, civil penalties include:
Where any law provides for punitive damages, such a law shall apply.
Where environmental pollution or ecological damage causes harm to others, the tortfeasor shall assume the tort liability. The infringed party may claim compensation for losses, an apology, or restoration to the original state.
For damage to the ecological environment, provincial and municipal governments and their designated agencies or an organisation prescribed by law have the right to claim damages from the infringer. Article 1232 of the Civil Code stipulates a punitive compensation system for environmental pollution and ecological damage under specific conditions.
Environmental civil liability adopts the principle of no-fault liability and the inverse principle of proof liability. If a dispute arises due to environmental pollution or ecological damage, the actor shall bear the burden of proof for demonstrating the existence of grounds for not bearing liability or mitigating liability as stipulated by law and that there is no causal relationship between their behaviour and the damage.
In addition to this, public interest litigation is involved in civil liability (see 11.1 Civil Claims).
The Administrative Measures for the Legal Disclosure of Environmental Information of Enterprises were issued by the MEE and came into force on 8 February 2022. The measures stipulate the enterprises that are specifically required to disclose environmental information such as key emission units and implement mandatory clean production audits. The measures stipulate that enterprises must disclose the following:
Enterprises that violate the provisions of the Administrative Measures for the Legal Disclosure of Environmental Information of Enterprises and do not disclose environmental information, or disclose environmental information that is untrue or inaccurate, will face penalties of ordering correction, notification and disciplinary criticism, as well as fines.
Starting from 1 May 2024, companies listed on the Main Board and the ChiNext Board in China are required to disclose relevant information in accordance with the sustainability report guidelines announced by the exchanges. This includes information on multiple aspects such as addressing climate change, pollution control and ecosystem protection.
Historical pollution problems mainly concern soil and groundwater pollution. Given that the historical pollution prevention and control facilities and environmental management system were not satisfied, there may be landfill waste, chemical leakage and sudden accidents that result in soil and groundwater pollution.
When the land is handed over to the next owner or returned to the government, it may be found that the damage caused by the historical pollution accident still exists. The land needs to be investigated and evaluated according to the current laws and regulations or even organised for restoration. Responsibility for restoration is still allocated according to the “polluter pays” principle. The “Changzhou poisoned land event” has proved that the unit that caused historical pollution should bear the environmental tort liability.
According to the Measures for Reporting Information on Environmental Emergencies issued by the MEE, environmental reporting requirements mainly include:
In China, environmental accidents may lead to legal liability, including criminal, administrative and civil liability.
Criminal Liability and Key Defences
According to the Criminal Law, criminal liability for environmental pollution can be up to 15 years’ imprisonment and a fine. The main defences against criminal liability are:
Administrative Liability and Key Defences
The main defences against environmental administrative liability are:
In recent years, various places have introduced a “list of exemptions for minor offences” and discretionary rules – for example, the Yangtze River Delta Integrated Ecological Penalty Regulations.
Civil Liability and Key Defences
China’s civil liability for compensation adopts the principle of “filling up”. In recent years, there have been cases of compensation of hundreds of millions of Chinese yuan. The main defences against environmental civil liability are:
Enterprises violating laws and regulations related to environmental protection may be subject to criminal, civil or administrative liability. (For more details, see 5.1 Key Types of Liability.) In addition, this may have a negative impact on the environmental credit evaluation of the enterprise. It will be subject to negative public evaluation results, suffer loss of eligibility for government procurement, be impacted regarding bank loan financing, and be subject to more frequent supervision and other disciplinary actions.
According to the Environmental Protection Tax Law, enterprises, public institutions and other producers and operators that directly discharge taxable pollutants into the environment are regarded as payers of environmental protection tax and should do so in accordance with the law. Taxable pollutants include noise, air pollutants, water pollutants and solid waste, as stipulated in the Table of Environmental Protection Tax Items and the Table of Taxable Pollutants and Equivalent Values.
Natural resource tax is also regarded as a kind of green tax. China’s Resource Tax Law stipulates that taxable products include energy minerals (oil, natural gas, coal, geothermal, etc), metal minerals, non-metallic minerals, hydrous minerals, and salt.
The Resource Tax Law stipulates that enterprises and individuals developing taxable resources within Chinese territory and other sea areas under their jurisdiction must pay resource tax in accordance with this law. The specific scope of the resource tax shall be determined by the Table of Resource Tax Items and Rates.
Incentives for Good Environmental Citizenship
Tax incentives
The following tax incentives apply, as per the Environmental Protection Tax Law and its Implementation Regulations.
The following tax incentives apply, as per the Regulations for the Implementation of the Enterprise Income Tax Law.
Green credit
Financial institutions in China have started to provide preferential credit terms to businesses that meet certain environmental criteria, thereby encouraging green financing and sustainable practices. An environmental credit system has been developed in accordance with the provisions of the Enterprise Environmental Credit Evaluation Measures (for trial implementation). Enterprises are classified into four levels (A,B,C and D), according to their environmental behaviour.
A corporate credit repair system has also been developed – for example, in Shanghai, according to the Shanghai Municipal Enterprises and Public Institutions Ecological Environment Credit Repair Management Regulations (for trial implementation). Enterprises and institutions with ecological and environmental credit failures that take the initiative to rectify ecological and environmental violations may, in accordance with the prescribed conditions and procedures, apply for restoration to the department that imposed the ecological and environmental administrative penalty.
Environmental certification
Obtaining environmental certifications, such as the “Green Label” or “Environmental Management System” certifications, can enhance a company’s reputation and market access. This creates incentives for environmental responsibility.
Penalties for Bad Environmental Citizenship
The penalties for bad environmental citizenship are mainly criminal, civil and administrative liability or a lower credit rating. (For more details, see 5.1 Key Types of Liability.)
A parent company has independent legal status and normally is not impacted by the environment liability caused by its subsidiaries. However, if the parent company has engaged in acts that are related to the causes of an environmental accident (eg, excessive control), the subsidiaries’ illegal behaviours could also be attributed to the parent company. Hence, in particular cases, the shareholders might bear civil, administrative or even criminal liability.
A waste water company in Nanjing has repeatedly discharged high-concentration waste water and toxic and hazardous sludge hazardous waste into the Yangtze River, causing enormous ecological and environmental damage. The waste water company paid the ecological environment restoration fee in the final reconciliation agreement and its parent company assumed joint and several liability.
In the “3.21” accident caused by the explosion of hazardous waste, even the legal representative and general manager of the parent company had assumed criminal liability.
ESG requirements focus on the disclosure of enterprises’ information. The requirements for enterprises are a combination of mandatory disclosure and voluntary disclosure. More and more enterprises are beginning to establish ESG strategies and corresponding governance institutions, promoting the integration of ESG and sustainable development concepts with the enterprises’ strategies.
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange has divided the ESG disclosure requirements into three stages since 2015.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) revised the “Guidelines for the Governance of Listed Companies” by adding content on environmental protection and social responsibility. This establishes the basic framework for ESG information disclosure of Chinese listed companies.
The MEE has issued and implemented the “Management Measures for Legal Disclosure of Enterprise Environmental Information”. This specifies the subject and content of legal disclosure of enterprise environmental information (see 5.2 Disclosure for further details).
On 25 July 2023, the State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council released the “Research on the Preparation of ESG Special Reports for Central Enterprise Holding Listed Companies”, which includes the “Reference Index System for ESG Special Reports of Central Enterprise Holding Listed Companies” to further standardise the ESG information disclosure of central enterprise-holding listed companies. This is a milestone in the development process of local ESG in China. Local state-owned assets supervision and administration commissions have also put forward more requirements for social responsibilities and ESG.
On 12 April 2024, the three major stock exchanges in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing respectively issued self-regulatory guidelines for listed companies in a document entitled Sustainability Report (Trial). Listed companies on the Main Board and the STAR Market should disclose the “Sustainability Report of Listed Companies” or the “Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance Report of Listed Companies” in accordance with these guidelines and the relevant regulations of the exchanges. The self-regulatory guidelines require listed companies to use the double materiality approach in order to identify sustainability disclosure topics.
Regular Inspection
Companies operating in China, especially those engaged in industries with potential environmental impacts, may be subject to regular environmental inspection conducted by the relevant environmental protection authorities (eg, the MEE and the EED).
Cleaner Production Audit
This is an audit mechanism to assess the environmental protection status of an enterprise, with the aim of reducing environmental pollution and resource wastage. Depending on how the audit is participated in, it can be categorised as either voluntary or mandatory.
Voluntary audits are audits that are voluntarily applied for by the enterprise, whereby the degree of participation and audit criteria are decided by the enterprise itself. According to the Interim Measures on Cleaner Production Audits, mandatory audits are conducted by the government or relevant organisations to compel some enterprises to carry out audits. Audit standards and the degree of participation are determined by the government or organisation.
According to the Criminal Law and relevant provisions, if the environmental pollution crimes are unit crimes, the directly responsible persons in charge and other responsible persons should be fined and punished. The “directly responsible person in charge” includes the actual controller of the unit, the principal person in charge or the authorised person in charge, and senior management personnel.
In environmental administrative liability, administrative detention measures are targeted at company executives and other directly responsible persons. The detention is less than 15 days for the following acts:
China does not yet have an environmental liability insurance system for individual executives. There may be some commercial insurance companies that offer something similar. However, except for the situation of environmental accidents causing damage, the aforesaid violation of laws resulting in administrative or criminal liability may be excluded from the insurance coverage.
China’s current environmental pollution liability insurance is divided into compulsory and voluntary insurance.
The Environmental Protection Law stipulates encouragement of environmental pollution liability insurance. The Solid Waste Law, which took effect in September 2020, stipulates that units collecting, storing, transporting, utilising and treating hazardous waste should take out environmental pollution liability insurance in accordance with relevant state regulations.
In China, the pilot work of environmental insurance was first carried out in 2007. However, the Measures for Compulsory Environmental Pollution Liability Insurance (Draft) – published in 2017 – still remains at the stage of seeking public opinions and has not been further reviewed. According to the draft, compulsory environmental pollution liability insurance covers personal damage to third parties, as well as property damage, ecological damage, and emergency treatment and clean-up costs.
In 2021, the Shenzhen Municipal Government issued the Implementation Measures for Compulsory Liability Insurance for Environmental Pollution in Shenzhen City, which is the only legally mandatory insurance type in the field of national ecological environment. The measures require the following enterprises to take out compulsory liability insurance for environmental pollution:
The insurance liability scope of compulsory liability insurance for environmental pollution includes damage to the person and property of a third party, damage to the ecological environment, and emergency disposal and clean-up expenses – as well as necessary and reasonable legal expenses such as litigation fees, arbitration fees, and lawyer fees – resulting from environmental incidents or environmental pollution caused by production and business activities.
The Environmental Protection Law does not directly regulate the environmental protection responsibilities of financial institutions and lenders. Accordingly, the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) issued Green Credit Guidelines to provide guidance for the development of green credit for banking financial institutions, and proposed that environmental risk assessment and management should be strengthened. The CBRC also proposed that pre-loan due diligence should be undertaken and customers with non-compliant environmental and social performance should not be granted credit.
According to China’s Green Credit Guidelines, banking financial institutions must establish and constantly improve a system of environmental procedures – including social risk management policy – developing the customer’s environmental and social risk assessment standard and social risk evaluation and classification. The results should be the basis of rating, credit access, management and exit.
If necessary, qualified and independent third parties may also be engaged to evaluate or audit the activities of banking financial institutions, so as to fulfil their environmental and social responsibilities.
Where an enterprise or an individual causes personal injury or property damage to others due to environmental pollution or ecological damage, the party that commits the infringing act shall bear tort liability. The infringed party may file a civil lawsuit in accordance with the relevant provisions of tort liability in the Civil Code and relevant environmental protection laws.
If pollution causes harm to the public interest, the legally prescribed authorities (the People’s Procuratorates) and qualified environmental NGOs may file civil environmental public interest litigation against the polluter. The people’s governments at the provincial or municipal level and their assigned departments (eg, environmental authorities) may ask for compensation through negotiation. If the negotiation fails to reach an agreement, then the above-mentioned authorities have a right to sue in court, which is known as a “lawsuit for damages to ecological environment”.
The other situation is default. If both parties have agreed on environmental protection obligations in the contract, the party in breach of the contractual obligations – for example, environmental obligations agreed in the context of M&A of companies – will be liable for breach of contract.
Punitive damages are clearly stipulated in the Civil Code (which did not exist before December 2020). Where the infringer intentionally pollutes the environment and damages the ecology in violation of the law and causes serious consequences, the infringed will have the right to request corresponding punitive damages. There are three conditions:
The Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on the Application of Punitive Damages to the Trial of Ecological and Environmental Tort Dispute Cases, which came into effect on 1 January 2022, specifically regulates this measure.
In China, the Civil Procedure Law regulates the joint action by one party consisting of numerous persons, which may be brought by a representative elected by such persons. The procedural acts of such representative will be binding on all members of the party they represent.
If the object of the action is of the same category and a party consists of numerous persons, and upon institution of the action the number of persons is not yet determined, the court may issue a public notice stating the particulars of the case and the claims and requesting that the claimants register with the court within a certain period of time.
Claimants who have registered with the people’s court may elect a representative to engage in litigation; if no such representative can be elected, the court may discuss the matter of determining a representative with the registered claimants. The procedural acts of a representative will be binding on the party they represent.
The case of Lujiazui Group and the “toxic land” in Suzhou originated from a change in the nature of Shougang Group’s old factory area in Suzhou, which was then acquired by Lujiazui Group through auction. Soil pollution was found during the process of real estate development and construction. In 2021, a soil pollution investigation at the Suzhou Reading School found serious pollution at the site. Subsequently, investigations by Lujiazui Group into other plots also confirmed the existence of serious pollution risks.
In November 2023, Lujiazui Group sued Shougang Group and others in court owing to a soil pollution infringement dispute, claiming more thanCNY10 billion. Shougang Group responded that it had truthfully disclosed the partial pollution of the land and accused Lujiazui Group of causing “secondary pollution” due to incorrect construction methods.
Currently, the case is still under trial. This case is a significant warning to enterprises. Before conducting land transactions and development, they must attach great importance to preliminary work such as soil pollution investigations.
Article 153 of the Civil Code stipulates that a juristic act violating the imperative provisions of any law or administrative regulation shall be void, unless the imperative provisions do not result in the nullity of the juridical act.
The parties may agree on the allocation of the responsibility and liability for the prevention and control of pollution through agreement, without violating the mandatory provisions of laws and administrative regulations. When environmental violations occur, one party has the right to require the other party to bear the corresponding liability for pollution. However, the responsibility for pollution prevention and control agreed through an agreement cannot be a defence against the infringed claiming compensation, nor can it be a defence against administrative punishment.
For more information on this issue, see 9.1 Environmental Insurance.
The laws and regulations governing soil pollution in construction land are as follows:
According to the law, the person (or persons) responsible for soil pollution has the obligation to implement soil pollution risk control and remediation. If the person(s) responsible for soil pollution cannot be identified, the land use rights-holder shall carry out soil pollution risk control and remediation, including soil pollution investigation, risk assessment, risk control, remediation, risk control effect assessment, remediation effect assessment, and later-stage management. Article 94 of the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law stipulates the “substituted fulfilment” system.
According to Article 45 of the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law, the main bodies that bear the responsibility for soil pollution control include:
The Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law has always emphasised the principle of “polluter pays”. There are two ways in which an environmental public interest litigation defendant can assume responsibility for environmental remediation – namely, either by organising the implementation of environmental remediation or by bearing the costs of remediation. Therefore, in the event that the polluter does not have the ability or willingness to do so, it can fund the implementation of soil remediation entrusted to a third party.
Based on the Interim Measures for the Determination of Persons Responsible for Soil Pollution on Construction Land and the Interim Measures for the Determination of Persons Responsible for Soil Pollution on Agricultural Land, the administrative liability of persons responsible for soil pollution can be determined. The foregoing two measures do not apply when determining the person liable for soil pollution in civil disputes over soil pollution between responsible parties and individuals.
Civil liability is determined on the basis of the “polluter pays” principle and the Civil Code in relation to torts provisions.
Tort Liability Litigation
According to Article 96 of the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law, a person can bear tort liability according to the law. In civil disputes arising from soil pollution, the parties concerned may apply to the competent ecological and environmental authorities of the local people’s government for mediation and processing or may bring a lawsuit to court.
Public Interest Litigation
According to Article 97 of the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law, if soil pollution damages national interests or social public interests, procuratorates and NGOs may bring a lawsuit to court in accordance with the Environmental Protection Law, the Civil Procedure Law, the Administrative Procedure Law and other laws.
As for organisations, according to Article 58 of the Environmental Protection Law, social organisations that meet certain conditions may bring a lawsuit to court against acts polluting the environment, damaging the ecology, and damaging public interest. (For more detail, see 11.1 Civil Claims.)
The process of investigating environmental accidents is based on the Measures for Investigation and Punishment of Environmental Emergencies promulgated by the EED from 1 March 2015 onwards. The investigation process is as follows:
China now has a “1+N” system for climate change policy.
The State Council has also issued the Interim Regulations on the Management of Carbon Emission Trading and the MEE has issued the Measures for Carbon Emissions Trading Management (Trial), Management Measures for Voluntary Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Trading (for Trial Implementation).
In addition, China has enacted the renewable energy Cleaner Production Promotion Law. This year, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress released the second-reading draft of the Energy Law of the People’s Republic of China and solicited opinions from the public. The law on addressing climate change is also in the process of legislative formulation.
China has also released carbon emissions calculations and verification standards for 24 industries (eg, power generation, steel, civil aviation, chemical, and cement). The first national standard for product carbon footprint accounting, “Requirements and Guidelines for Quantifying Carbon Footprints of Greenhouse Gas Products”, was officially implemented on 1 October 2024.
The MEE – together with the NDRC, the People’s Bank of China, the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC) and the CSRC – jointly issued the “Guidelines on Promoting Investment and Financing in Response to Climate Change”, with the aim of promoting climate investment and financing.
The carbon emission targets are mainly “30, 60”. China proposes that carbon dioxide emissions peak by 2030 and strives to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060.
According to the 14th Five-Year Plan and the Long-term Goals for 2035, by 2025, energy consumption and CO₂ emissions per unit of GDP will be reduced by 13.5% and 18% – respectively – from 2020 levels.
Although China has not completely banned asbestos mines and asbestos products, it has long been aware of the harm caused by asbestos dust to the environment and the human body. In 2007, China issued the National Standard for Occupational Health Management of Asbestos Operations (GBZ/T 193-2007). From the perspective of occupational health monitoring, the standard provides effective and feasible occupational disease-prevention measures and operation procedures for preventing asbestos dust emission during asbestos operations and for controlling dust pollution.
PCBs
Since 1974, China has not manufactured power capacitors containing PCBs. In August 1979, China stipulated that electrical equipment with PCBs as the medium would no longer be imported. If import is truly necessary, it must be reported to the competent department of the State Council for approval.
In 1991, China formulated the Regulations on Preventing PCB Electrical Equipment and Its Waste From Polluting the Environment and the Control Standard on PCBs for Waste Slags. The latter was superseded by the Standard for Pollution Control on PCB-Contaminated Waste in 2017. The standards clearly stipulate the categories of waste containing PCBs, as well as the environmental protection requirements for the entire process of cleaning, collecting, packaging, transporting, temporarily storing, storing, and harmlessly treating and disposing of waste containing PCBs.
Since 1998, PCB waste has been controlled as hazardous waste in China.
The key laws and regulations on waste management in China are as follows:
Depending on waste type and harmfulness, the Solid Waste Prevention and Control Law sets requirements for industrial solid waste, domestic garbage, construction waste, agricultural solid waste, hazardous waste pollution prevention, and stricter management and punishment of industrial solid waste and hazardous waste.
Many local governments have issued regulations on the management of domestic garbage. These regulations set requirements for the classification, collection, transportation and disposal of domestic garbage.
According to Article 36 of the Solid Waste Prevention and Control Law, entities generating industrial solid waste must establish and improve a system of responsibility for the prevention and control of pollution of the environment throughout the entire process of generating, collecting, storing, transporting, utilising, and disposing of industrial solid waste.
Entities must verify the qualification and technical capacity of the entrusted party and sign a written legal contract, which should also stipulate the requirements for pollution prevention and control responsibilities and consequences for all parties. Anyone who fails to verify the technical capability of the transportation and disposal enterprises, or fails to stipulate the requirements for pollution prevention and control in the written contract, will be subject to administrative punishment and will bear joint responsibility with the entrusted party that causes environmental pollution and ecological damage.
Article 66 of the Solid Waste Prevention and Control Law stipulates that an extended producer responsibility (EPR) system must be established for electrical and electronic products, lead storage batteries, and automotive traction batteries. The producers of electrical and electronic products, lead storage batteries, automotive traction batteries and other products must – as required – implement a used product recovery system that fits the sales of the products themselves, disclose the system to the public, and achieve effective recovery and utilisation.
The design and manufacture of products and packaging must comply with the state regulations on cleaner production. Enterprises that produce, sell or import products and packages that are listed in the compulsory recovery list must recycle such products and packages in accordance with the relevant regulations.
In addition, the state encourages the R&D, production, sale and use of agricultural film that is environmentally degradable and harmless.
Waste operators have the right to transport, utilise, and dispose of industrial solid waste.
According to the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law, the process of soil pollution remediation and treatment must not cause new pollution to the soil and the surrounding environment. Waste, solid waste and hazardous waste generated in the land remediation activities must be handled in accordance with laws and regulations.
Waste operators transferring contaminated soil should develop a transfer plan detailing the transport time, mode, route, destination, final disposal measures, and amount of contaminated soil. This is to be reported in advance to the ecological environment authorities of the original location and the receiving destination.
Waste operators must not transfer solid waste out of the administrative areas of provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities directly under central government for storage and disposal without approval. Waste operators must establish solid waste management accounts and record them truthfully.
For liability for breaches of these obligations, see 5. Environmental Liability.
According to the Emergency Response Law, when an accident or disaster occurs, enterprises must immediately organise the emergency rescue team and staff to rescue victims, evacuate people, resettle threatened persons, control hazards, indicate the danger zone, block the dangerous sites, and take other necessary measures to prevent the harm from expanding. At the same time, enterprises must report to the local people’s government at the county level.
The Measures for Emergency Management of Environmental Emergencies stipulate that, when an enterprise causes an environmental emergency accident, it must:
Chapter V of the Environment Protection Law stipulates information disclosure and public participation. Citizens, legal persons and other organisations have the right to access environmental information, participation and supervision and the right of environmental protection.
The Administrative Measures for the Legal Disclosure of Environmental Information of Enterprises stipulate the relevant environmental information that enterprises should disclose. (For more details, see 5.2 Disclosure.)
According to the Regulations on the Disclosure of Government Information, administrative organs should take disclosure as normal and non-disclosure as an exception, as well as follow the principles of fairness, justice, legality and convenience. There are two forms of disclosure of government information by administrative organs – namely, voluntary disclosure and application disclosure.
Some enterprises are mandatorily required to disclose environmental information in accordance with the Administrative Measures for the Legal Disclosure of Environmental Information of Enterprises. (See 5.2 Disclosure for details.)
China has initially established a multi-level green financial product matrix covering green loans, green bonds, green insurance, green funds and investments, green leasing and financial leasing, green trusts, and carbon financial products. The key entities responsible for overseeing and promoting green finance include:
Investigation of Excessive Emissions Involving Change of Land Use or Recovery and Transfer of Land Use Right
According to Article 67 of the Soil Pollution Prevention and Control Law, land use right-holders must conduct soil pollution investigations – in accordance with regulations – before the use of land for production and the operation of key units under soil pollution supervision is changed or their land use right is withdrawn or transferred.
The State has issued the Guidance for Environmental Investigation, Assessment and Restoration of Industrial Enterprise Sites (Trial) and technical guidelines for soil pollution investigation, monitoring and risk assessment in construction land (from HJ.1-2019 to HJ 25.6-2019) to guide due diligence work.
Environmental Risk Assessment and Investigation in Credit Financing Procedures
Banking financial institutions are required to conduct environmental due diligence in accordance with regulations and standards before granting credit lines (as mentioned in 10.2 Lender Protection). However, national environmental protection laws do not require environmental due diligence.
Financial institutions may entrust professional institutions to assist in the assessment of green investment. According to the regulations, financial institutions are also required to evaluate the ability of investment project subjects to manage environmental risks.
Scope of Environmental Due Diligence
In order to prevent and control potential environmental legal liability risks, some enterprises carry out special environmental due diligence voluntarily before listing and M&A. The scope and depth of environmental due diligence in specific M&A will be determined by each client according to their own needs.
Environmental due diligence is the basis for enterprises to carry out follow-up environmental risk prevention and control. Increasingly, enterprises attach importance to the pre-investigation and entrust corresponding professionals (eg, lawyers and technical experts) to carry out corresponding investigations, which can help enterprises to effectively identify and control corresponding risks.
In the process of product sales, procurement vendors have a legal obligation to disclose some environment-related information, such as a seller’s request to the buyer to provide a material safety data sheet.
The Administrative Measures on Restricted Use of Harmful Substances in Electrical and Electronic Products stipulate that sellers of electrical and electronic products must not sell any products that violate the national or industrial standards for limiting the use of harmful substances in these products.
In the process of M&A, it is not a mandatory legal requirement for the seller to disclose information to the buyer. However, the principle of good faith stipulated in Article 7 of the Civil Code is the basic principle that civil subjects should follow when engaging in civil activities.
Regulatory Compliance
There may be compliance issues, such as enterprises lacking environmental permits or not holding them in accordance with regulations, enterprises violating environmental laws and regulations, and construction projects not conducting EIAs in accordance with the law.
Pollution and Contamination
There may be pollution and pollution liability issues, including site pollution and the risk of pollution migration. There may also be non-compliance in waste management, such as improper disposal of hazardous waste.
Known and Potential Liabilities
Identification of any existing environmental liabilities – for example, ongoing or pending lawsuits related to environmental damage, or regulatory orders for remediation. Unclear and potential future liabilities allocation clauses can lead to disputes between buyers and sellers over responsibility when environmental issues occur. In representation and warranty clauses, if the seller’s statements about the environmental situation are false, the buyer may suffer losses.
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Rogers.wu@jinmao.com.cn www.jinmao.com.cnContinuous Strengthening of Ecological Environment Legislation and Supervision Law Enforcement
China is compiling the Ecological Environment Code in an orderly manner. The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress’ 2024 legislative work plan has included the compilation of the Ecological Environment Code. Compiling the Ecological Environment Code is an opportunity to comprehensively sort out the successful experiences and practical laws characterising Chinese environmental justice and summarise the practice and theory of environmental civil litigation, environmental administration, environmental criminal litigation, environmental public interest litigation, ecological damage compensation, etc. This will provide support for the institutional design of the Ecological Environment Code, thereby achieving a positive interaction between justice and the compilation of the Ecological Environment Code and between the Ecological Environment Code and the promotion of justice work.
Refinement and improvement of supporting regulations
China is actively working on the formulation and revision of regulations such as the Ecological Environment Monitoring Regulations and the Chemical Substances Environmental Risk Management Regulations, as well as the formulation and revision of supporting regulations and rules for the Marine Environmental Protection Law and the Ozone-Depleting Substances Management Regulations. For areas lacking standards (eg, the management of new pollutants), corresponding standards and specifications will be formulated as soon as possible. China is also continuously promoting the construction of an ecological environment standards system.
Administrative Penalties: Continuous Strengthening of Environmental Law Enforcement
In 2024, central ecological environment protection supervision continues to be carried out in terms of:
Strengthening connection between ecological environment administrative law enforcement and criminal justice
The comprehensive administrative law enforcement reform of ecological environment protection has involved the Ministry of Public Security and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate, etc, carrying out special actions to severely crack down on the environmental crimes of illegal hazardous waste and the illegal falsification of key pollutant discharge units’ automatic monitoring data for four consecutive years. A special rectification action for the problem of falsification by third-party environmental service institutions is also being continuously advanced.
Pollutant Discharge Permits
The pollutant discharge permit (PDP) is a certificate that contains all environmental management requirements for the production and operation period. The PDP has become the main basis for enforcement supervision by the authorities at the Ministry of Ecology and Environment.
There are three types of PDP:
The PDP covers information such as production processes, the discharging points, the emission concentration limits and quotas, and the self-monitoring requirements (online and manual).
Implementation of PDPs
As per the requirements, enterprises must disclose the implementation information (including the quarterly implementation report and annual implementation report) on the national administrative online platform. The authorities at the Ministry of Ecology and Environment will keep track of the information uploaded by the enterprises to improve the efficiency of their supervision. Anyone can access the online platform and some basic information is also available to the public.
Recommendations for PDP owners
In order to better cope with the law enforcement trend of a “one permit” governance system, enterprises with PDPs should focus on the following main aspects.
Accelerated Construction of Carbon Emission Double Control System and Active Promotion of Development of Green and Low-Carbon Transformation Methods
In 2024, the State Council issued the “Work Plan for Accelerating the Construction of the Carbon Emission Double Control System”. This established a new mechanism for the comprehensive transformation from energy consumption double control to carbon emission double control, in addition to accelerating the construction of a dual control system for the total amount and intensity of carbon emissions.
Improvement of carbon emission-related planning system
Carbon emission indicators are set to be incorporated into planning. Action plans for carbon peaking and carbon neutrality are being formulated and the legal system related to carbon emission double control must be improved. The revision of systems such as the energy-saving review method for fixed asset investment projects and the energy-saving management method for key energy-consuming units will be accelerated and include requirements for carbon emission double control.
Development of regulatory role of national carbon emission rights trading market
The work plan aims to improve the regulatory mechanism of the national carbon emission rights trading market, gradually expand the industry coverage range, explore the quota paid distribution mechanism, improve the level of reporting and verification, and promote the reduction of carbon emissions by enterprise compliance. It also aims to improve the national voluntary greenhouse gas emission reduction trading market, gradually expand the support fields, and promote a wider range of emission reductions. The improvement of the green certificate trading market must also accelerate and the consumption of green electricity shall be promoted.
In addition, the plan includes establishing a local carbon emission target evaluation and assessment system, exploring a carbon emission early warning and control mechanism in key industry fields, improving the carbon emission accounting mechanism in key industry fields, and establishing a carbon emission monitoring and early warning mechanism in other industry fields. The enterprise energy conservation and carbon reduction management systems are also to be improved. Other measures include conducting carbon emission evaluation of fixed asset investment projects, incorporating greenhouse gas emission control into EIAs, and accelerating the establishment of a product carbon footprint management system.
Gradual Improvement of National Carbon Emission Trading Market System
The national carbon market includes a mandatory carbon emission trading market and a voluntary emission reduction trading market. The two carbon markets operate independently and are connected through the quota clearance offset mechanism, forming the national carbon market system together.
Mandatory carbon emission trading market
Since 2023, the State Council has promulgated and implemented the Interim Regulations on Carbon Emission Trading Management. The national carbon emission trading market has basically formed a running system structure that includes carbon emission data accounting, reporting and verification, quota distribution and clearance, and market trading and supervision.
The competent government department is responsible for formulating the quota distribution plan and issuing the annual carbon emission quotas to key emitting units. Key emitting units need to account for and report the carbon emission data of the previous year each year and accept the data verification carried out by the competent government department. Key emitting units must submit quotas for compliance that are not less than their actual emissions before the deadline for compliance.
Voluntary emission reduction trading market
In January 2024, the national greenhouse gas voluntary reduction trading market was officially launched. Next, the national carbon emission trading market’s industry coverage will be steadily expanded, and the construction of the national greenhouse gas voluntary reduction trading market will be improved. National carbon market greenhouse gas emission management regulations will be introduced to strengthen the daily supervision of carbon market data quality. The implementation of the methane emission control action plan will be promoted.
Comprehensive Green Transformation and ESG Disclosure
Comprehensive green transformation entails the promotion of the green and low-carbon transition in all areas of economic and social development, including the optimisation of industrial structure, the transformation to green industries, and the green transformation and upgrading of traditional industries. The production method emphasises the application of green production technology and improves the level of resource recycling. Social development is guided by green factors, including the formation of green consumption concepts and lifestyles.
Policies for comprehensive green transformation
In 2024, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council issued the Opinions on Accelerating Comprehensive Green Transformation of Economic and Social Development. This covers many aspects, including:
Green financial support for green and low-carbon development
In March 2024, many departments in China jointly issued the “Guiding Opinions on Further Strengthening Financial Support for Green and Low-Carbon Development”. Generally, it is necessary to strengthen the financial support for green and low-carbon development and construct a relevant system. The guiding opinions mention that the green financial standards system will be optimised, the development of green financial products and markets will be promoted, and the constraint mechanism based on information disclosure will be strengthened, including encouraging financial institutions and financing subjects to carry out environmental information disclosure. Credit rating agencies will be encouraged to establish and improve a rating system for green financial products and supported in incorporating ESG factors into the credit rating method and model.
ESG information disclosure guidelines
On 12 April 2024, the three major exchanges in mainland China respectively issued the “Guidelines for the Sustainable Development Report of Listed Companies” (“the Guidelines”) and officially implemented them from 1 May 2024.
The Guidelines require listed companies to use the dual importance method to identify sustainable development disclosure topics. The disclosure subject should identify:
The Guidelines of the Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing exchanges integrate mandatory disclosure and voluntary disclosure. Companies within the disclosure scope shall disclose the Sustainable Development Report for 2025 for the first time no later than 2026.
In May 2024, the Ministry of Finance of China officially issued “China’s Enterprise Sustainable Disclosure Standards – Basic Standards (Draft for Solicitation of Opinions)” (the “Basic Standards (Draft for Solicitation of Opinions)”) and the “Drafting Explanation of Enterprise Sustainable Disclosure Standards – Basic Standards (Draft for Solicitation of Opinions)” (the “Drafting Explanation”). The overall goal is that, by 2027, China's enterprise sustainable disclosure basic standards and climate-related disclosure standards will be successively introduced. By 2030, a unified national sustainable disclosure standards system will be basically established.
Work Safety Management
As an important part of EHS management, workplace safety and environmental protection often fall within the responsibility of the same department of an enterprise. The key recommendations based on the amended Work Safety Law are as follows.
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