The UAVs, two with fixed-wings and one with multi-rotors, will take aerial photographs of suspect factories and workshops to provide evidence of polluting activities.
Hebei, regarded as one of the highly industrialised province is located in the close proximity to Beijing and identified as one of the prime polluting sources for the capital with 22 million people who bore the brunt of polluted smog round the year.
Cao Yaming, an engineer at the monitoring station, said these images will then be verified and the companies concerned punished if they are found to be breaking the law.
"They can make up for any shortfalls in human-led ground inspections and satellite remote sensing monitoring," Cao was quoted by state-run China Daily as saying today.
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"Though large in scale, satellite remote sensing is not as timely as the UAVs in obtaining information about polluters."
The use of UAVs to monitor pollution began in March last year when the Ministry of Environmental Protection carried out inspections in the city of Handan, Hebei province, and discovered that some plants' environmental protection facilities were not in operation, according to a report in Hebei Daily.
Other provincesthat have used UAVs for environment monitoring work include Henan, Shaanxi, Shandong, and Heilongjiang.