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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Ten Chinese cities issue pollution red alert
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 24, 2015


Toxic smog brings nightmare 'white Christmas' to Beijing
Beijing (AFP) Dec 25, 2015 - Beijing residents woke up to a white Christmas Friday morning but with the sky obscured by thick toxic smog rather than snow after more than 100 million people across China had been warned to stay indoors.

The capital and surrounding parts of northern China are regularly blanketed in deadly pollution associated with heavy industry and an increase in coal consumption during the winter months.

Counts of PM2.5 -- harmful microscopic particles that penetrate deep into the lungs -- in Beijing peaked at 620 micrograms per cubic metre as of early Friday, according to data from the US embassy.

The World Health Organization's recommended maximum exposure is 25 micrograms over a 24-hour period.

"If this only happened a few days a year, I'd put up with it, but it's paralysing for it to be like this every day!" said one angry social media user on China's Twitter-like Weibo platform. "Is this the new normal?"

The city posted contradictory alerts for Christmas day, with the Beijing Meteorological Service issuing an orange alert - requiring factories to limit expelled pollutants and schools to cease outdoor activities -- while the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau issued only a yellow alert, the second lowest in a four-tiered, colour-coded warning system.

The smog is expected to last until Saturday afternoon.

Photos on social media showed empty freeways shrouded in a white-out of haze as authorities shut down highways in the region and grounded flights out of the capital.

More than 500 international and domestic arrivals and departures at Beijing's main airport were cancelled due to "heavy fog and low visibility", its website said.

"In this kind of weather, can Santa even find Beijing?" a user wrote on Sina Weibo.

In the neighbouring city of Tianjin, no fewer than 19 freeways were closed early Friday morning, according to the Tianjin Freeway Management Office's official microblog, with CCTV television reporting visibility of less than five metres (15 feet).

"Santa can't even get to Tianjin! I was wondering why my stocking had no gifts in it! Smog you better get out of here!" said another Weibo commentor.

Beijing issued its first-ever red alert on December 7, declaring emergency pollution measures following scathing public criticism of the city's weak response to choking smog that settled on the capital earlier in the month.

Its second and latest red alert, which lasted four days, concluded Tuesday night.

More than 100 million people in China have been warned to stay indoors after at least 10 Chinese cities issued red alerts for smog, state media reported Thursday.

Pollution covered large parts of the country's east and centre as measures to curb the toxic haze were ordered to be implemented.

The alert came as broad swathes of the country suffered through their fourth wave of choking pollution this month.

In addition, the eastern province of Shandong, home to almost 96 million and some of the 10 cities under red alert, issued its first ever top-level warning Wednesday, the provincial environmental bureau said.

It is believed to be the first time an entire province has issued a red alert.

The ten cities include the sprawling industrial hub of Tianjin in the northeast.

Counts of PM2.5 -- harmful microscopic particles that penetrate deep into the lungs -- in one of the cities under red alert, central Henan Province's Xinxiang, were as high as 727 micrograms per cubic metre earlier Thursday, according to provincial authorities.

The reading is nearly 30 times the World Health Organisation's recommended maximum exposure of 25 over a 24-hour period.

The sharp rise in alerts follows Beijing's decision earlier this month to issue its first ever red alerts, the highest in its four-tier system, in response to scathing public criticism about the government's handling of the chronic haze.

The capital cancelled its red alert for pollution at midnight on Tuesday as a cold front blew away the foul air, state-run Xinhua news service said Thursday.

The notice saw factories ordered to close and half of all private cars pulled off the streets, among other measures.

In an announcement yesterday, the national environmental bureau has ordered six major cities, which were not named, to evaluate their warning systems, it said, adding that they should improve implementation "emergency emissions reduction" measures.

Beijing's decision earlier this month seems to have opened the floodgates for red alerts from other cities, many of which had long suffered silently through regular waves of smog.

Air quality for November and December was at a three year low, according to the state-run China Daily, despite measures to tackle the chronic problem.

"Soaring coal pollution" is to blame, it said, quoting air pollution expert Meng Fan at the China Research Academy of Environmental Sciences.

China's President Xi Jinping has said that the country's CO2 emissions, to which coal is a major contributor, will peak "around 2030".

However, China's state council has announced plans to reduce by 60 percent the amount of "major pollutants" coming from its coal-fired power plants by 2020.

Earlier this month, environmental organisation Greenpeace said Beijing had approved the construction of 155 new coal-burning power plants in 2015.

China's rise to the world's second largest economy was largely powered by cheap, dirty coal. As growth slows, the country has had a difficult time weaning itself off of the fuel, even as the pollution it causes wreaks havoc on the environment and public health.


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