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Now we are in Trump time with the expectations that business in the US will be cut free of the shackles of the nanny state,
So what could such a light handed approach look like in a few years time ? Perhaps we should consider the China approach of a light touch on industry as a case study.
Shanghai water supply hit by 100-tonne wave of garbage
Ships are suspected of dumping waste upstream on China’s Yangtze river before it floats into a key city reservoir

A tourist surrounded by rubbish on a beach in China. The country has struggled to contain environmental pollution during its long economic boom. Photograph: Feature China / Barcroft Media
Benjamin Haas in Hong Kong
Friday 23 December 2016 06.46 GMT Last modified on Friday 23 December 2016 06.48 GMT
Medical waste, broken bottles and household trash are some of the items found in more than 100 tonnes of garbage salvaged near a drinking water reservoir in Shanghai.
The suspected culprits are two ships that have been dumping waste upstream in the Yangtze river. It has then flowed downstream to the reservoir on Shanghai’s Chongming island which is also home to 700,000 people.
The reservoir at the mouth of the river is one of the four main sources of drinking water for the country’s largest city, according to local media.
China has struggled with air, soil and water pollution for years during its economic boom, with officials often protecting industry and silencing citizens that complain. China’s cities are often blanketed in toxic smog, while earlier this year more than 80% of water wells used by farms, factories and rural households was found to be unsafe for drinking because of pollution.
...
Earlier this year more than 500 students developed nosebleeds, rashes and illnesses, some as severe as leukaemia, in what local media linked to illegal toxic dumping by chemical factories.
Although parents complained for months, local officials ignored their claims and disputed any connection despite levels of chlorobenzene, a highly toxic solvent that causes damage to the liver, kidney and nervous system, nearly 100,000 times above the safe limit.
The country’s air pollution has been shown to contribute to more than 1 million deaths a year, linked to about a third of deaths in China’s major cities.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/dec/23/shanghai-water-supply-hit-by-100-tonne-wave-of-garbage
So what could such a light handed approach look like in a few years time ? Perhaps we should consider the China approach of a light touch on industry as a case study.
Shanghai water supply hit by 100-tonne wave of garbage
Ships are suspected of dumping waste upstream on China’s Yangtze river before it floats into a key city reservoir

A tourist surrounded by rubbish on a beach in China. The country has struggled to contain environmental pollution during its long economic boom. Photograph: Feature China / Barcroft Media
Benjamin Haas in Hong Kong
Friday 23 December 2016 06.46 GMT Last modified on Friday 23 December 2016 06.48 GMT
Medical waste, broken bottles and household trash are some of the items found in more than 100 tonnes of garbage salvaged near a drinking water reservoir in Shanghai.
The suspected culprits are two ships that have been dumping waste upstream in the Yangtze river. It has then flowed downstream to the reservoir on Shanghai’s Chongming island which is also home to 700,000 people.
The reservoir at the mouth of the river is one of the four main sources of drinking water for the country’s largest city, according to local media.
China has struggled with air, soil and water pollution for years during its economic boom, with officials often protecting industry and silencing citizens that complain. China’s cities are often blanketed in toxic smog, while earlier this year more than 80% of water wells used by farms, factories and rural households was found to be unsafe for drinking because of pollution.
...
Earlier this year more than 500 students developed nosebleeds, rashes and illnesses, some as severe as leukaemia, in what local media linked to illegal toxic dumping by chemical factories.
Although parents complained for months, local officials ignored their claims and disputed any connection despite levels of chlorobenzene, a highly toxic solvent that causes damage to the liver, kidney and nervous system, nearly 100,000 times above the safe limit.
The country’s air pollution has been shown to contribute to more than 1 million deaths a year, linked to about a third of deaths in China’s major cities.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/dec/23/shanghai-water-supply-hit-by-100-tonne-wave-of-garbage