Abstract
This paper analyzes water quality management in China in terms of legislation, institutions, and management instruments, and provides suggestions on improving the system. China has developed a separate, sectoral water quality management system where instruments including standards, function zones, permits, and charges are extensively applied. Nevertheless, problems such as lack of integrated frameworks, overlapping functions, focus on pollution control, poor implementation, and inadequate capacity limit its effectiveness. China should fully implement and reform the current system, restructure water quality management institutions, manage its water resources in a river basin context, and encourage market-based approaches.
Acknowledgements
The paper is supported by Research on Groundwater Management Systems, Natural Sciences Foundation of China, Project No 71073174; and Research on Water Sector Modernization of China, Social Science Foundation of China, Project No 11AZD007.