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The problem of Industrial Pollution in Taiwan
The fact was that the
Department of Health had started to draw up an effluent
standard since September 1984. Experts from some 27
organizations were invited to participate in the work
of drawing up the standard and after several dozen
meetings, they completed a draft by the end of 1986.
Since Wei-chuan Food Processing Company put forward
a different opinion concerning the degree of transparency,
the draft was returned to the group for further study.
In a meeting on February 7, 1987, the group decided
not to change most of the standards except for adopting
a stricter standard of mercury bearing. Finally, the
Effluent Standard was approved by the Executive Yuan
on April 11 and issued by the Department of Health
on May 5, 1987. (Chung-kuo shih-pao, 1987/02/08/3;
EPA. 1994: 65
Behind all these events
was the fact that the situation of Taiwan's water
pollution was already quite serious in the 1980s.
The EPB drew up a plan to implement water pollution
prevention and control in April 1986. This plan revealed
that 7 of the 151 rivers in Taiwan were seriously
polluted and altogether 23 percent of the rivers had
been polluted to different degrees. Moreover, organic
substances had polluted 88 irrigation channels and
most reservoirs had become eutrophicated. (Lien-ho-pao,
1986/04/30/2) Another report in 1988 said that the
water quality of 34 percent of the wells inspected
by the health authority were found to be substandard
and this indicated that underground water was also
seriously polluted. (Taiwan jih-pao, 1988/10/22/3)
Along at the same time,
the situation of water pollution deteriorated. Table
1 shows the statistics provided by the EPA. Taking
all three levels together, in the case of 21 major
rivers, the polluted length increased from 26 percent
in 1983 to 39 percent in 1996; in the case of 29 minor
rivers, from 31 percent in 1987 to 34 percent in 1996.
It is especially notable that the percentage of heavy
pollution among the major rivers increased from around
5 percent to 16 percent and among the minor rivers
from 5 percent to 11 percent. The situation seems
to improve a little bit in 1997 and 1998.
As
for the situation of 16 reservoirs in Taiwan, the
phenomenon of eutrophication was quite common. The
EPA statistics show that the 12 reservoirs had a Carlson
TSI of more than 50 in 1993-1994; the number reduced
to 4 in 1995 and to 5 in 1996. If looking at a Carlson
Tsi between 40 and 50, then only Sun-Moon Lake was
below this level. The Fei-ts'ui Reservoir which supplies
water for the Taipei area usually had Carlson TSI
around 40 while the Ch'eng-ch'ing Lake which provides
water for the Kaohsiung area had a Carlson TSI around
80 in 1996. (EPA, 1997: 122-123)
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