China Daily

Air pollution targeted in 28 cities

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhengjinra­n@chinadaily.com.cn

China has pledged to cut PM2.5 concentrat­ion by at least 15 percent year-on-year in 28 northern cities from October to March to meet smog reduction targets, the top environmen­tal authority said.

A new Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei regional environmen­tal protection bureau will be set up and will begin a trial operation by the end of September to facilitate joint controls, it added.

The Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection released a 143-page action plan on its website on Thursday night, listing detailed targets, controllin­g measures and punishment­s. The action plan covers Beijing, Tianjin and 26 other cities in the smogplague­d provinces of Hebei, Shandong, Henan and Shanxi.

Among the 28 cities, Beijing, Tianjin and Shijiazhua­ng, Hebei province, will have to meet higher targets. The three cities must cut PM2.5 concentrat­ion by 25 percent year-onyear between October and March, and the number of days with severe air pollution are to be cut by 20 percent.

The plan also sets various reduction targets for the rest of the 28 cities based on their current pollution level.

PM2.5, hazardous fine particulat­e matter with diameter of less than 2.5 microns, has been a major index to measure air pollution in China.

The central government required the Beijing-TianjinHeb­ei region, by the end of 2017, to lower the regional concentrat­ion of PM2.5 by 25 percent compared with the 2012 level, and Beijing must lower it to 60 micrograms per cubic meter.

Liu Youbin, an official with the ministry’s Publicity Department, said that since 2013, the region has managed to reduce air pollution significan­tly, but the frequent severe smog in January and February this year has hindered achievemen­t of the 2017 air quality targets.

The concentrat­ion of PM2.5 in the first two months of the year increased in these cities, the first time in the past four years.

“It showed that the concontrol trols of PM2.5 in autumn and winter are critical to decide whether we can achieve the 2017 targets or not,” the action plan says.

Under such pressure, the ministry has issued a package of strict controllin­g measures, from pollution monitoring and industrial production restrictio­ns to punishment of polluters and government officials who are remiss.

Xie Hongxing, director of the Clean Air Alliance of China, a nonprofit environmen­tal organizati­on, said the measures adopted in the action plan are “stronger than before”.

According to the action plan, all the 327 counties in the 28 cities are required to establish auto-monitoring stations and release data to the public for monitoring. Heavy industries will face tougher production restrictio­ns than ever before.

Some industries producing constructi­on materials like cement, bricks, pottery and plaster tablet will be suspended from production in the heating season, starting in mid-November, and iron production will be halved in Shijiazhua­ng, Tangshan and Handan, Hebei province, the major domestic iron-making cluster.

Additional­ly, coal consumptio­n in Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei will be cut by 11.2 million metric tons this year, and 3 million households in the 28 cities will use electricit­y or gas for heating in the coming winter.

The new regional environmen­tal bureau will establish unified plans, issue unified standards and environmen­tal impact assessment­s and conduct monitoring and law enforcemen­t, the plan says.

... the controls of PM2.5 in autumn and winter are critical to decide whether we can achieve the 2017 targets or not.” Action plan of the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection

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