http://www.latimes.com/news/world/worldnow/la-fg-wn-china-environment-protest-20130511,0,2555930.story

Chinese take to streets to push environmental concerns
a.. By Don Lee 
May 11, 2013, 10:15 p.m.
SHANGHAI -- Reflecting growing social tensions over China's high pollution, 
hundreds of demonstrators marched here Saturday to protest the building of a 
lithium-ion battery plant, while officials of another major Chinese city where 
people took to the streets recently over a chemical refinery said they might 
pull the project.

The Shanghai protest was the third in recent weeks since residents learned that 
Hefei Guoxuan High-Tech Power Energy Co. would construct a battery factory in 
the Songjiang district of this financial hub. Last month, a caravan of cars 
bearing green ribbons drove around the community to call attention to concerns 
that the plant would pollute the air and local water sources.

Video footage and photos of the march Saturday showed adults and children 
holding Chinese flags and signs depicting black smoke and saying, "No factory; 
we love Songjiang." Reuters news service estimated that the demonstration 
attracted 1,000 people, who walked peacefully while being watched by police. No 
arrests were reported.

The protests, plus petition signatures collected from more than 10,000 
residents, already have pushed Songjiang officials to scale back the factory's 
production capacity, according to local media. But neither that nor government 
statements about the environmental impact have satisfied the community.

The march took place under sunny but hazy skies in what was one of the worst 
air-pollution days ever recorded, according to a common reading of air quality. 
Shanghai authorities issued a warning that people should limit their outdoor 
time.

Environmental concerns have become an increasing source of social unrest in 
China as residents have become emboldened about voicing their outrage over 
damage from unbridled industrial growth, sometimes leading to violent clashes 
with police.

At times, protests have pushed authorities to make concessions. On May 4, 
hundreds of people took to the streets in the southwestern Chinese city of 
Kunming, where residents have complained for months about a petrochemical 
facility planned by China National Petroleum Corp.

On Friday, the city's mayor pledged to cancel the project if most residents 
objected to it.


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