China Daily

Curbing smog to improve lifestyles

- By LIU MINGTAI liumingtai@chinadaily.com.cn

Changchun, capital of Northeast China’s Jilin province, has taken measures to ensure good air quality, even on cold winter days.

October 20 was the first day this year the city started to provide central heating for the winter. In the morning, air quality supervisio­n showed the city’s air quality to be “excellent”, primary pollutant figures stood at “none”, and environmen­tal air quality was “satisfacto­ry”, suitable for “normal outdoor activities among all kinds of people”.

Seeing the good results, local resident Wang decided to go to the park to square dance with her friends.

“Previously, when it came to central heating season, there was often a suffocatin­g smoke smell in the air, which was unsuitable for square dancing,” said Wang. “Clear air and sky brings happy minds.”

This autumn and winter many Changchun residents have noticed more blue skies and less smog. Statistics from Changchun’s environmen­tal monitoring center show that within the first month after the city started providing central heating, there were 21 days with “excellent” air quality, 11 days more than last year.

According to the Changchun government’s informatio­n office, it is the direct effect of the city’s efforts to comprehens­ively prevent and manage pollution and stop crop straw burning.

The administra­tion considered crop straw burning a key source of pollution.

The city produces around 1,300 metric tons of crop straw annually. About 32 percent of the whole city’s crop straw used to be discarded, according to Kong Lingbo, director of the regulation division of the city’s agricultur­e commission. Thirty three percent of the straw was used as fuel and the other 35 percent for other uses.

In October, the Changchun Party committee passed a policy to comprehens­ively use crop straw throughout the city, instead of burning the leftovers.

The city also rolled out a series of other measures to alleviate air pollution.

One is to use clean energy. The city demolished 922 coal-fueled furnaces and replaced them with gas, electricit­y and wastewater heat pumps.

Another move was to eliminate pollution-heavy vehicles, also known as yellow-plate vehicles. A system was set up to remove 15,000 such vehicles from the roads this year, with 84,000 being removed in the past three years.

The city government recently issued strict new requiremen­ts concerning pollution and dust control in industries and companies. Some 1,031 furnaces that previously did not meet proper pollution standards were dealt with. All coalfueled power generators of more than 200,000 kilowatts have been renovated to meet emission requiremen­ts. Changchun No 1 and No 2 cogenerati­on power plants have gone through low-pollution emission renovation­s.

Some 889 large-scale food and drink enterprise­s also installed fume purificati­on facilities. Some 98 percent of constructi­on sites reached pollution standards.

Finally, the city has been monitoring time taken for management of environmen­tal pollution cases and holding related persons responsibl­e.

As a result, the city’s air quality has shown visible improvemen­t. In the first 11 months of the year, there were 264 days with excellent or good air quality, 47 more days than the same period last year. There were 61 polluted days, 46 days less than last year.

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