National Post (National Edition)

The poorest add to China’s smog issue

VILLAGERS WHO DEPEND ON BURNING COAL TO KEEP WARM IGNORE EDICTS FROM BEIJING

- GERRY SHIH

An overloaded coal truck rumbles down from the steel factory and hits a bump, sending chunks of its black cargo skittering and click-clicking along the asphalt. Waiting by the roadside, a farmer swaddled in thick, cotton-padded winter clothing scrambles into onrushing traffic to pick up the pieces.

Four hours a day, four days a week, the villager, whose surname is Shen, comes to a spot near her home where a never-ending procession of coal trucks runs into uneven pavement. A thousand little bumps in the road keep Shen and her husband from freezing in winter.

“If I don’t come out here, I stay cold,” Shen says as she drops a few more recovered chunks into a sooty burlap sack. In one winter, Shen says, she could burn more than 2 tons of coal, worth more than 1,800 yuan ($344).

Across vast swaths of northern China’s countrysid­e, residents go to great lengths to burn untreated coal in home stoves despite government efforts to ban the practice and introduce cleaner — but costlier — types of coal or electrical heating.

That dependence represents one of many challenges facing Beijing as it tries to curb the choking smog that’s become a flash point for public discontent with the ruling Communist Party.

Experts say coal-fired power plants and steel and cement mills are the main contributo­rs to year-round smog, but household coalburnin­g in rural areas is a major cause of the spike in pollution during winter, when thick, grey soup-like clouds of dust smother Chinese cities, often forcing highways and airports to close.

Middle-class Chinese complained vociferous­ly as smog blanketed Beijing over the New Year period. A picture of a high-speed train stained a deep brown after passing through smoggy regions went viral on social media.

In June, a team of researcher­s from Princeton, the University of California, Berkeley, and Peking and Tsinghua universiti­es in Beijing published a study that found that household coal use in winter contribute­d more small and deadly air particles than industrial sources, some of which are outfitted with carbon-capture technologi­es.

Authoritie­s in Hebei province, which surrounds Beijing, announced in September that they would ban household coal-burning in nearly 4,000 villages near the capital by late 2017, according to state media. Last week, the official Xinhua News Agency quoted a Beijing official saying coal-burning furnaces for heating have now been completely removed from the city’s urban districts.

But in rural Qian’an, 220 kilometres from Beijing, in Hebei, China’s largest steelmakin­g region, the riverside road where Shen scavenges for coal is a reminder of the challenges. Up the road is a sprawling factory owned by the Shougang Group, one of China’s largest steelmaker­s — and polluters.

The other direction opens up into the poplar-lined countrysid­e, where elderly and poor residents burn coal in shallow undergroun­d hearths. The government is encouragin­g them to use cleaner coal briquettes that burn at lower temperatur­es, but villagers dismiss those as hard to light and lacking in heat.

While residents in poor parts of Beijing get subsidies for using cleaner-burning coal or switching to electricit­y, such incentives are unheard-of in some other parts of the country.

Coal-burning has been blamed for the tiny, toxic PM2.5 particles that caused an estimated 366,000 premature deaths in China in 2013, according to an August study by Wang Shuxiao, an environmen­tal expert at Tsinghua University.

Wang said cleaner coal would theoretica­lly emit 50 to 80 per cent fewer particles than untreated coal, but the process of switching is slow. She said it has taken Beijing, the prosperous capital, close to two decades to phase out more polluting heating methods.

“The switch is happening. It’s just not happening as fast as we want,” Wang said.

The government has sought to clamp down on the market. At the Guo Zhuang coal shop in Qian’an, a large yard was empty except for a few small piles of coal halfcovere­d by tarps.

Market supply has been meagre and prices have risen since authoritie­s cracked down on the sale of coal for private use in recent months, said a worker surnamed Lu who spoke only after making sure that visitors were not investigat­ors from the environmen­tal protection bureau.

On a nearby wall was an October government notice forbidding “unauthoriz­ed” coal sales, but coal still made its way to homes. As she spoke, Lu’s brother-in-law filled a small truckload and drove off to the home of a relative Lu said was bedridden and needed heat.

Some villagers are unconvince­d that the coal they burn contribute­s much to the country’s air-quality problems.

“Look at our chimney. That little bit of smoke is called pollution?” says Yao Junhua, a 61-year old farmer. “Look at the steel mill. How much coal does it burn a day? The 400 households in our little village, how much coal do we burn?”

The Associated Press was unable to reach Shougang Group using phone numbers listed on its website and email.

On the country road outside the steel mill, its smokestack­s rising out of the haze, Shen the coal scavenger says her 65-year-old husband did constructi­on work but is now too old. Her daughter recently married and moved to a city but can’t help them because she is saving for a house and a car.

Scavenging coal keeps them warm, and sometimes they have enough left over to sell, Shen says as another truck hits a bump and drops pieces of coal.

“These things are precious,” she says. Then she scurries back into traffic.

 ?? NG HAN GUAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man looks up near smoke spewing from the Jiujiang steel mill in Qianan, in northern China’s Hebei province.
NG HAN GUAN / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man looks up near smoke spewing from the Jiujiang steel mill in Qianan, in northern China’s Hebei province.

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