China News Service, June 1, according to the Ministry of Ecology and Environment website, in March, the country's "12369 Environmental Reporting Network Management Platform" received a total of 33,676 environmental protection reports, up 191.1% from the previous month and down 26.0% from the same period last year. Among them, reports of air pollution and noise pollution are prominent, and the total number of reports in Guangdong, Chongqing, Jiangsu, Henan and other places ranks first.

  Of the reports received in March, 26218 were accepted, and 7458 were not accepted because the clues to the report were unknown or did not fall within the responsibility of the ecological environment department.

The phone reported the largest increase month-on-month

  In March, among the reports received nationwide, the "12369" environmental protection report hotline reported a total of 12310 cases, accounting for about 36.6%, WeChat reported 18588 cases, accounting for about 55.2%, online reports 2540 cases, about 7.5%, 238 other channels , About 0.7%. Among them, the number of telephone reports increased by 311.3% month-on-month and decreased by 42.1% year-on-year.

Atmospheric and noise pollution reports are prominent

  In terms of pollution types, air pollution and noise pollution reported more in March, accounting for 58.2% and 55.7% of the total reported, and water pollution, solid waste pollution, ecological damage, and radiation pollution accounted for 15.7%, 11.3%, and 1.9% and 0.8%.

Proportion of pollution types in March 2020

  Among the air pollution reports, the most reported were malodorous / odorous odors, accounting for 42.8% of gas-related reports, followed by smoke dust and industrial exhaust gas reports, which accounted for 27.8% and 15.1% of gas-related reports, respectively. Among the noise pollution reports, industrial noise pollution reports were the most reported, accounting for 61.5% of the noise reports, followed by construction noise pollution reports, accounting for 26.8%. Among the water pollution reports, the most reports reflect domestic sewage pollution, accounting for 42.6% of wading reports, followed by reports reflecting industrial wastewater pollution, accounting for 27.9%.

The proportion of reports in the construction industry has increased significantly

  From the perspective of industry types, the public in March reported that the most concentrated industry was construction, accounting for 45.2%, followed by accommodation, catering, entertainment, and livestock breeding, accounting for 12.5% ​​and 8.3%, respectively. Among them, the construction industry reported an increase of 36.4 percentage points month-on-month, the accommodation, catering and entertainment industry increased by 1.8 percentage points month-on-month, and the livestock and poultry breeding and chemical industries reported a decrease of 16.5 percentage points and 4.3 percentage points respectively.

Proportion of major industry reports in March 2020

Guangdong, Chongqing, Jiangsu and Henan report the highest volume

  Judging from the number of reports from different channels in various regions, Guangdong, Chongqing, Jiangsu, Henan and other places ranked first, with telephone reports from Chongqing and Shanghai accounting for a relatively high proportion, and Guangdong, Zhejiang, Shaanxi, and Jiangxi reporting from WeChat.

Reports by provinces (autonomous regions and municipalities) in March 2020

Proportion of major types of pollution by province (region, city) in March 2020

  Judging from the percentage of pollution types reported by provinces, Shanghai's air pollution reports account for a relatively high proportion, accounting for about 26 percentage points higher than the national average, mainly reflecting industrial waste gas and catering oil smoke pollution. Reports of noise pollution in Guangxi and Shaanxi are relatively prominent locally, accounting for about 14 percentage points above the national average, mainly reflecting industrial noise pollution. The local water pollution report in Hubei accounts for more than 11% of the national average, mainly reflecting domestic sewage pollution.