The EPA finally began
to consider vigorously the problem of enterprise waste.
In October 1996 the EPA urged the cleaning squads
of 36 townships who had served as agents to dispose
of the enterprise waste to report the amount of waste
precisely. (Chung-kuo shih-pao, 1996/10/03/7) The
EPA also proposed to establish a center for the management
of enterprise waste and a system of common treatment.
(Taiwan shih-pao, 1996/11/15/7) Moreover, the EPA
conducted investigations over the private waste disposal
agencies. It was found that among 173 registered agencies,
32 were nominal companies without real addresses,
going out of business, or actually engaging in other
trades.
It was also found that gangsters were deeply
involved with the waste disposal business. The statistics
showed that by the end of 1996, only 26 of the 784
registered waste disposal agencies were qualified
for the first grade; this indicated that the capacity
of first-grade disposal agencies was not sufficient
to meet the need of the current industrial scale.
(Chung-kuo shih-pao, 1996/12/09/2; Tzu-li tsao-pao,
1996/12/10/7) On June 20, 1997 the EPA established
the Enterprise Waste Control Center. It was expected
to collect 85 percent of enterprise waste within one
year, to get the disposal on the right track in five
years, and to reach the standard of an advanced country.
The EPA's target is that by the year 2011, the proper
disposal rate of waste produced by industry, agriculture,
hospital, and construction can be raised to one hundred
percent. (Tzu-li tsao-pao, 1987/06/21/7) Thus we at
least know what is the target of the EPA concerning
the enterprise waste disposal.
2. The problem of water pollution
Although the Water Pollution
Control Act was promulgated in 1974, it was no executed
seriously until 1986. In early 1986 a series of events
occurred along the southwestern coast of the island
where oysters, clams, and shrimps cultured by aquatic
farms died collectively. The reason was due to water
pollution. To deal with the urgent situation, the
Taiwan Provincial Government set up a special group
in April 1986. At the same time, the Department of
Health quickly passed the "Executive Points of the
20th Item of the Water Pollution Control Act." Accordingly,
factories located in areas where the rivers had been
seriously polluted would be posed a daily fine continuously
until they improved their water pollution prevention
equipment. (Chung-yang jih-pao, 1986/04/17/2; Chung-kuo
shih-pao, 1986/04/25/3) In June, the Taiwan Provincial
Government urged the central authority, then the Department
of Health, to decide effluent standards for the wastewater.
(Ming-chung jih-pao, 1986/06/02/2)