Chinese French Law
Chinese French Law
Chinese French Law
A study conducted with the International Network of Basin Organizations (INBO) 188 members in 68 countries
www.inbo-news.org
Provincial and municipal governments can establish their own legal systems leads to differences in implementation and coordination problems
Water is a common national heritage and belongs to nobody, including the State itself State : only a regulating and controlling role Decentralized water management - At municipality level for drinking water supply and sanitation utilities - At river basin level for water resources
State ownership of water defined in the Constitution Right to use water must be authorized by the central government Provincial and lower levels of government can not decide for water allocation
Legislation
1964 Water Law : founder law of basin management, creation of basin institutions (Basin Committee for dialogue between users, Water Agency for funding), cost recovery principle (PP principle) 1984 Fishing Law : ecological minimal flow imposed to dam managers to sustain aquatic ecosystems 1992 Water Law : planning documents at river basin level, overall management of all waters, balanced management between uses with a priority for drinking water supply 2000 European Water Framework Directive : common objectives, methods and deadlines for the 27 Member States of EU ; achieving a good status of waters in 2015 ; applying river basin management to all EU countries 2006 Water and Aquatic Environment Law : updating in financing system of Water Agencies, creation of the National Agency for Water and Aquatic Environment
Legislation
2002 Water Law of the Peoples republic of China (on the basis of an older law of 1988) : key law defining nature of water management in China water allocation, rights and permits, river basin management, water use efficiency, protection of water resources from pollution for the first time in China, the 2002 law defines river basin management institutions, requires planning and cost recovery 1997 Flood Control Law 1996 Law on Prevention and Control of Water Pollution 1999 Marine Environmental Protection Law Translation of central government laws into each provincial legislation + own provincial regulations : regional differences in the implementation Conflicts between ministries over policymaking & implementation Difficulty to enforce the laws on water pollution control and water allocation to urban & rural water users
Sub-basin NATIONAL WATER COMMITTEE Advice on draft laws, reforms, national action plans Large basin LOCAL WATER COMMISSION Water Management Plan (SAGE)
State representatives
C Implementation of Water charges Polluter pays (water consumption, pollution, ) Redistribution principle according to C priorities in the Financial action basin
programmes (6 years) 12 billion euros (2009-2015) Financial support to WFD programmes of measures Subsidies (grants & loans) (treatments, river restoration, )
Water planning
2002 Water Law : - National strategic planning - River basin planning - Regional planning - Mid and long-term plan for demand and supply of water - Masterplan for integrated management of water environment - Annual water allocation plans River basin management holds today a high position in Chinas water policy system with specific targets in the national 5-year plan for environmental protection 20062010
Financing
Specific financial resources for water collected by Water Agencies (polluter pays principle) : water pays for water Multi-year investment program : Action Plan of the Water Agency supports investments to reduce pollution and preserve aquatic environments Current evolution towards a more cost-effective logic and environmental logic (optimizing the investment of each euro, reaching the good water status of the WFD)
Funds transfered from ncentral government to river basin organizations allowing their development But lack of basin funding mechanism 2007 : environmental protection included as budget item in national public finance significant progress in public finance for the environment
Water pricing
Average: 3 euros/m3 (1,5 USD) 0,8 % of household budget Water bill: a fixed part (covers fixed costs) + a variable part (proportional to consumption) The water price includes the cost of the drinking water supply & sanitation services + water taxes levied by Water Agencies 7 different water taxes to integrate environmental cost, but level of water taxes remains low for agriculture (political issue) New 2002 Water Law reform of water pricing from free/cheap pricing in the collective era to commodity pricing increase in water price 4,5 Yuan / m3 (0,55 USD) for Beijing, one of the highest in China 1,8 Yuan/m3 (0,22 USD) in Kunming
Concluding remarks
Development of regulations and financial tools in China, but implementation of IWRM and river basin management faces many challenges Issues to be improved:
clarification of responsibilities between ministries, cross-sectoral coordination, basin-wide structures and systems reinforce polluter-pays principle basin funding mechanisms stakeholder and public participation
Usefulness of a partnership for capacity building with International Office for Water and INBO within the EU/China River Basin Management Program