China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Group lauds success with air pollution

Effective controls in most of the 161 Chinese cities measured bring significan­t improvemen­ts

- By ZHENG JINRAN in Beijing zhengjinra­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Effective pollution controls adopted in 161 major Chinese cities have greatly improved air quality, a green organizati­on said on Monday.

Of the cities, 90 percent have reached their goals, and 14 have managed to cut their PM2.5 concentrat­ion by over 20 percent, said Fu Lu, head of the China office of Clean Air Asia, an environmen­tal group headquarte­red in Manila, the Philippine­s, which released an annual assessment of the government efforts to fight air pollution.

Last year, major pollutants such as sulfur dioxide were reduced 21.9 percent year-on-year, and the average PM2.5 reading was lowered by 14.1 percent in the cities, the report said, citing data from the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

PM2.5 refers to particulat­e matter with a diameter less than 2.5 microns that poses risks to human health.

But eight cities saw increases in PM2.5 levels, Fu said.

Among the eight, Zhengzhou and Jiaozuo in Henan province saw PM2.5 increase by 9 percent over 2014, and Yingkou, Shandong province, experience­d a 23 percent increase, Fu said.

The other cities with higher PM 2.5 levels were Sanmenxia, Henan province; Zaozhuang and Rizhao, Shandong province; Changchun, Jilin province; and Langfang, Hebei province, the report said.

“Reducing pollution is not a simple issue that only needs strong determinat­ion. It also requires scientific and technologi­cal support,” said He Kebin, head of the School of Environmen­t at Tsinghua University.

Some cities didn’t realize the importance of the technology behind their ambitious targets, He said.

Reducing pollution is not a simple issue that only needs strong determinat­ion. It also requires scientific and technologi­cal support.”

He Kebin,

head of the School of Environmen­t at Tsinghua University.

of measured 161 major Chinese cities reached their goals on improving air quality.

For example, Zhengzhou ambitiousl­y moved its 2018 target forward to last year, but failed to reach it.

Controllin­g pollution becomes more difficult as the easy problems are fixed first, and more complicate­d issues remain to be solved, He said.

Among the thorny issues is the increasing groundleve­l ozone, making it the second biggest pollutant in the country, the report said.

Both Fu and He agreed that most of the cities could reach the targets set for 2017.

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