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Chem»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp makes headway in waste water treatment

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-03-18 23:05

»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp National Chemical Corp (Chem»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp), the nation's largest chemical maker, said Tuesday it was making headway in waste water treatment amid increased efforts to save energy and reduce emissions.

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A pilot program in two chemical plants in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin could recycle more than 80 percent of the waste water generated by oil refining, the Beijing-based company said in a statement.

The recycling cost is just over 2 yuan (28 US cents) per tonne, compared with the city's water prices at 6.2 yuan per tonne, it said.

Chem»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp president Ren Jianxin said last December that the company had set a target of "zero emissions" and would invest 700 million yuan this year to help its plants with technological transformation.

The state-owned company would reduce energy consumption for every 10,000 yuan of production value by 7 percent this year, with waste water discharges, chemical oxygen demand and sulphur dioxide emissions set to drop three percent, he said.

Chemical oxygen demand is a measure of water pollution, while sulphur dioxide is a cause of acid rain.

Chem»Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp, established in 2004, was ranked 35th among »Ê¹ÚÌåÓýapp's 500 top enterprises last year, with assets and annual sales both exceeding 100 billion yuan.


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