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Chinese lose patience with pollution

Adnan Faruqi

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Apr 16, 2011
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Chinese lose patience with pollution

After enduring more than a month of choking, soupy smog, millions of people in North East China lost their patience yesterday, turning to the internet to vent their anger at the Chinese government.

Pollution readings in Beijing, collected by a monitor on the roof of the United States embassy, have hovered around "hazardous"since the beginning of November.

But in the past few days the crisis has intensified, grounding hundreds of flights at Beijing's Capital airport and halting traffic on major motorways. As 30 mile-long tailbacks formed in some areas, long-distance lorry drivers were given emergency handouts of instant noodles and water as they waited for visibility to return.

Public anger appears to have reached a tipping point, with millions expressing their fear and anger online and even state-run newspapers running critical editorials.

The China Daily newspaper compared Beijing to London in the 1950s, and warned that lung cancer rates in the capital had soared by 60 per cent in the past decade, even though there has been no accompanying increase in the proportion of the population that smokes.

Lung cancer is now one of the biggest killers on the Chinese mainland, accounting for 600,000 people last year.

"Increasing air pollution might be largely to blame," said Zhi Xiuyi, director of the lung cancer treatment unit at Capital Medical university, to the newspaper.

In the panic over the smog, Chinese retailers reported a jump in sales of protective masks, with 30,000 being sold on Sunday alone. :woot:

As commuters in Beijing turned on their fog lights and lost sight of the tops of their buildings, the city's Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau stuck to its line that air pollution was merely "moderate" only to be greeted with scorn.

"The city is claiming the smog has not reached 'medium pollution'. It is like being stabbed in the chest, without it piercing the heart, and claiming it as a 'minor' injury," said one commenter on Weibo, China's version of Twitter.

By contrast, the monitor of the roof of the US embassy, which broadcasts its readings automatically on the internet, went off the chart on Sunday, registering a measurement of "beyond index".

"The air has got worse and worse for a month, and this so-called 'fog' has lasted for days. Many people do not dare step outside. Masks have sold out. Our health is in danger. Many people are asking themselves whether they should stay in Beijing or leave," said another.

Ma Jun, the head of one of China's few environmental NGOs, the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, said the pollution across the North East was a combination of unfortunate weather and a haze of suspended particles from coal fires and industrial smoke stacks.

"Because particle pollution has reached an alarming level, any unfavourable weather, such as the current lull in wind, can cause quite serious consequences," he said.

"The government has made some efforts, for example switching to gas instead of coal in city centres. But there has been a huge rise in the number of cars, and large industrial parks now surround Beijing, which can still blow pollution over the city."

Mr Ma said the government should release transparent and accurate pollution readings so that the public could take its own precautions.

In the longer term, he urged a greater public transport programme and emissions controls on industry.

"People are more environmentally aware, and they are angry at the lack of transparency from the government," he said.

In the past two years, Beijing officials have announced good or excellent air quality nearly 80 per cent of the time. But the US embassy monitor, a source of some diplomatic tension, has flatly contradicted the official line. From January 2010 to last October, Beijing has only had 13 days a year of "good" air, and 297 days a year of unhealthy to hazardous air.

To achieve the official readings, Beijing has rearranged its monitoring stations twice since 2006, and takes an average across several stations, including one in the countryside that is some 20 miles outside the city centre. Beijing officials have now bowed to public pressure and said they will begin to provide readings of fine particulate pollution, the most damaging to human health, but only in 2016.


Chinese lose patience with pollution - Telegraph



Troll are requested to stay away and don't post off topic only china-pollution is the subject of this thread
 
From Govt. of china's official news website The China Daily, so that no one can deny it or make conspiracy theories



Beijing blackout as air quality is unmasked

001aa018f83f1047cdd108.jpg


They say a picture speaks a thousand words. This is a photo of China's capital taken from the exact same spot over the last four days. The combination image, taken from Dec 2 to 5, captures staggering changes in the air quality in Beijing. The photos show the visibility in the area ranging from Central Business District in Chaoyang District to Communication University of China. A photographer consecutively took photos at this same place for two weeks from Nov 22 to Dec 5 to record the "fog" in this area. The recent frequent "fog" blanketing Beijing has spurred the public to call for a revamp of the air pollution regulations in China, in particular the decision to monitor levels of ultra-fine particles known as particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5) which is deemed by some experts as the major cause of the choking smog. [Photo/CFP]

http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2011-12/06/content_14220670.htm
 
Smog cripples traffic, prompts mask sales surge

Updated: 2011-12-06 22:01

(Xinhua)

BEIJING - The ongoing foggy weather and decreasing air quality that have shrouded parts of China since Sunday has prompted a surge in mask sales and affected the vegetable supply by crippling traffic and closing expressways.

Smog cripples traffic, prompts mask sales surge

A woman rides her bicycle across an intersection as a heavy haze hangs in the air in central Beijing December 6, 2011. [Photo/Agencies]

According to statistics from Taobao Mall, China's largest online marketplace, more than 30,000 masks were sold on Sunday, more than 20,000 of which were bought by customers from Beijing.

The Beijing Meteorological Center on Sunday afternoon issued a yellow alert, the second-lowest level in the country's weather warning system, to warn about fog and smog in the capital, saying visibility would drop to less than 500 meters in most parts of the city.

The city's air pollution index (API) was between 150 and 170 on Monday.

Beyond masks, residents in many major cities are facing rising vegetable prices as the smog has closed expressways heading to Shouguang, the country's largest vegetable production base, located in Shandong province, where about 10 expressways have been forced to shut down, local authorities said.

The delays and difficulties in transporting vegetables shortens the preservation period, which in turn contributes to higher prices, said Zhang Yanxiang, chairman with the Yanxiang Organic Vegetable Ltd.

Visibility was reduced to less than 1,000 meters in north, central and east China, and less than 200 meters in a few areas, the National Meteorological Center (NMC) reported Tuesday.

As of 2 pm Monday, 207 inbound and outbound flights were canceled at Beijing Capital International Airport.

Scattered snow fall Tuesday morning has prolonged the fog and low visibility in Beijing.

In an effort to combat the smog and aid traffic, Beijing has increased lighting on roads.

Authorities with the Beijing Electric Power Corporation said they will initiate an emergency response lighting plan based on visibility standards.


Beijing blackout as air quality is unmasked|China photos|chinadaily.com.cn
 
Chinese lose patience with pollution

After enduring more than a month of choking, soupy smog, millions of people in North East China lost their patience yesterday, turning to the internet to vent their anger at the Chinese government.

Pollution readings in Beijing, collected by a monitor on the roof of the United States embassy, have hovered around "hazardous"since the beginning of November.

But in the past few days the crisis has intensified, grounding hundreds of flights at Beijing's Capital airport and halting traffic on major motorways. As 30 mile-long tailbacks formed in some areas, long-distance lorry drivers were given emergency handouts of instant noodles and water as they waited for visibility to return.

Public anger appears to have reached a tipping point, with millions expressing their fear and anger online and even state-run newspapers running critical editorials.

The China Daily newspaper compared Beijing to London in the 1950s, and warned that lung cancer rates in the capital had soared by 60 per cent in the past decade, even though there has been no accompanying increase in the proportion of the population that smokes.

Lung cancer is now one of the biggest killers on the Chinese mainland, accounting for 600,000 people last year.

"Increasing air pollution might be largely to blame," said Zhi Xiuyi, director of the lung cancer treatment unit at Capital Medical university, to the newspaper.

In the panic over the smog, Chinese retailers reported a jump in sales of protective masks, with 30,000 being sold on Sunday alone. :woot:

As commuters in Beijing turned on their fog lights and lost sight of the tops of their buildings, the city's Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau stuck to its line that air pollution was merely "moderate" only to be greeted with scorn.

"The city is claiming the smog has not reached 'medium pollution'. It is like being stabbed in the chest, without it piercing the heart, and claiming it as a 'minor' injury," said one commenter on Weibo, China's version of Twitter.

By contrast, the monitor of the roof of the US embassy, which broadcasts its readings automatically on the internet, went off the chart on Sunday, registering a measurement of "beyond index".

"The air has got worse and worse for a month, and this so-called 'fog' has lasted for days. Many people do not dare step outside. Masks have sold out. Our health is in danger. Many people are asking themselves whether they should stay in Beijing or leave," said another.

Ma Jun, the head of one of China's few environmental NGOs, the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, said the pollution across the North East was a combination of unfortunate weather and a haze of suspended particles from coal fires and industrial smoke stacks.

"Because particle pollution has reached an alarming level, any unfavourable weather, such as the current lull in wind, can cause quite serious consequences," he said.

"The government has made some efforts, for example switching to gas instead of coal in city centres. But there has been a huge rise in the number of cars, and large industrial parks now surround Beijing, which can still blow pollution over the city."

Mr Ma said the government should release transparent and accurate pollution readings so that the public could take its own precautions.

In the longer term, he urged a greater public transport programme and emissions controls on industry.

"People are more environmentally aware, and they are angry at the lack of transparency from the government," he said.

In the past two years, Beijing officials have announced good or excellent air quality nearly 80 per cent of the time. But the US embassy monitor, a source of some diplomatic tension, has flatly contradicted the official line. From January 2010 to last October, Beijing has only had 13 days a year of "good" air, and 297 days a year of unhealthy to hazardous air.

To achieve the official readings, Beijing has rearranged its monitoring stations twice since 2006, and takes an average across several stations, including one in the countryside that is some 20 miles outside the city centre. Beijing officials have now bowed to public pressure and said they will begin to provide readings of fine particulate pollution, the most damaging to human health, but only in 2016.


Chinese lose patience with pollution - Telegraph



Troll are requested to stay away and don't post off topic only china-pollution is the subject of this thread

Maybe according to the Indian logic, Chinese can not talk about this because China does not have democracy. However Shining Indians can speak out for everything.
 

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