Shanghai Daily

Cars not coal are now cause of PM2.5

- (Xinhua)

COAL burning is no longer a major source of the hazardous PM2.5 in Beijing according to a study released by Beijing’s environmen­t watchdog yesterday.

The watchdog said that car emissions have now become the top cause.

The new findings come as the capital is encouragin­g the use of natural gas instead of coal for winter heating and shutting down polluting smokestack factories.

Emissions from vehicles, ships, and constructi­on machinery are the top sources of PM2.5 (particulat­e matter of diameter less than 2.5 micrometer­s), contributi­ng up to 45 percent of the total pollutants in China’s capital, according to the study by Beijing Environmen­tal Protection Bureau.

Beijing has the highest level of car ownership in the country, with 5.64 million privately owned cars at the end of 2017. The city has cut the number of license plates issued annually from 240,000 in 2013 to 100,000 in 2017.

The study also showed that Beijing’s surroundin­g regions contribute­d to more than half of the pollutants on heavily polluted days when the air quality index exceeded 200 in the city.

Air samples were gathered daily in 11 different locations around Beijing and more than 300,000 sets of data were analyzed, said Liu Baoxian, deputy director of Beijing Municipal Environmen­tal Protection Monitoring Center.

The level of PM2.5 in Beijing has dropped to its lowest level since 2013 when the national air pollution control campaign began. Across the country, average PM2.5 density in 338 cities fell 6.5 percent in 2017.

The research was based on a seven-year study involving 270,000 rural residents in Sichuan, Gansu, Henan, Zhejiang, and Hunan provinces.

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