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The problem of Industrial Pollution in Taiwan
To what extent has animal
husbandry polluted the water in Taiwan? There is a
simple answer given by the annual report of environmental
protection as follows: "In the end of 1988, there
were 6,950,000 pigs, 1,760,000 cattle, 77,650,000
chickens, and 12,230,000 ducks raised in Taiwan. One
pig produces about 4 to 6 times of the waste produced
by one person. These animals and the slaughter of
them had produced a large amount of waste." (EPA,
1989: 2) However, there was no statement about the
amount of wastewater produced by animal husbandry
in this report.
The 1990 annual report
by the Taiwan Provincial Environmental Bureau gave
first note about animal husbandry wastewater. It admitted
that animal husbandry wastewater was one of the major
sources of river pollution. However, the number of
pigs still increased and the agricultural administrative
offices still had no definite policy to deal with
the problem.
Since most farms raised less than 1,000
heads of pigs, there was little incentive and it was
very hard to carry out improvement programs. (TPEPB,
1990: 90) The same words were repeated again and again
in the reports of following years and this reflected
that animal wastewater treatment was certainly not
easier than industrial wastewater.
In 1994 the EPA tried
to require all farms raising more than 200 pigs to
submit their reports on the result of wastewater control.
This requirement called forth a protest by pig farmers
who gathered outside the Legislative Yuan. More than
10 legislators were involved in the negotiation between
protesters and the EPA and asked that the requirement
be postponed. (Chung-kuo shih-pao, 1994/05/04/7; 1994/05/05/7)
In
1995 the EPA estimated that animal wastewater accounted
for 24.3 percent of the total amount of water pollution.
It also proposed to take up three strategies in programs
of river renovation to deal with animal wastewater.
These strategies were mainly designed for farms raising
more than 5,000 pigs. These farmers were required
to accord the effluent standard of wastewater and
to set up wastewater treatment equipment. These measures
would be applied first to farms located in areas where
water sources were already seriously polluted. (EPA,
1996: 166) In the same year, 10 rivers in central
and southern Taiwan were taken into renovation programs
with a stress on animal wastewater. (EPA, 1996: 169-170)
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