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Chinese court imposes record fine in water pollution case

The Three Gorges Dam, a gigantic hydropower project on the Yangtze River, in Yichang City, central China's Hubei Province. C) Action Press [2004] all rights reserved

BEIJING – A court in eastern China has issued the country’s biggest environmental fine resulting from public interest litigation against polluters as China tries to crack down on widespread environmental degradation.

The official Xinhua News Agency said the Jiangsu provincial high court on Tuesday ordered six companies to pay 160 million yuan (US$26 million) for discharging waste chemicals into rivers.

READ MORE: China to ban all coal use in Beijing by 2020 in anti-pollution effort

Xinhua said the public interest group, the Taizhou City Environmental Protection Association, had brought suit against the chemical and pharmaceutical companies.

The high court upheld a guilty verdict against the companies finding they discharged 25,000 tons of waste acid into two rivers.

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China is under intense pressure to clean up its contaminated environment and earlier this year launched an environmental high court hearing major cases and co-ordinating litigation in lower courts.

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