China Daily

Beijing, nation get breath of fresh air

- By ZHENG JINRAN zhenjinran@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing residents experience­d a December unlike any in recent memory, with the air quality as good as in southern coastal regions like tropical Hainan island. The clean air placed the capital for the first time among the 10 best cities for air quality, the top environmen­t authority said on Thursday.

Like the capital’s, the country’s air quality also underwent improvemen­ts in 2017, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection said.

In 2017, the average concentrat­ion of PM2.5 — particulat­e matter that measures 2.5 microns or less and is dangerous to humans — in 338 cities in China had been reduced by 6.5 percent from 2016 levels, reaching 43 micrograms per cubic meter, the ministry said. There were 284 blue sky days last year, it said.

Blue sky days refer to the days with good air quality, when the day’s average air quality index is lower than 100.

“By 2035, China will see the fundamenta­l turn for good in the environmen­t,” Li Ganjie, minister of environmen­tal protection, said when presenting the ministry’s goals in October. One index that should illustrate the improved air quality by then is the PM2.5 concentrat­ion, which is projected to fall to 35

micrograms per cubic meter.

Outpacing the national average in improving the air quality, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region saw more dramatic changes last year, especially during the winter, the ministry said in a statement.

In December, the region around the capital, prone to smog in winter, experience­d 65 percent of the days having blue skies on average, up by 34.1 percent year-on-year, the ministry said.

Besides, it’s the first time that Beijing squeezed into the best 10 list among the 74 major domestic cities, ranking ninth in December.

The 10 best cities usually are in southern coastal regions like Xiamen, Fujian province, and Haikou, Hainan province, or the regions with limited industrial growth like Lhasa, Tibet autonomous region, and Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province.

“It’s beyond imaginatio­n to see Beijing listed in the top 10 in December during the smog season in the past year, a delightful surprise,” Ma Jun, director with the Institute of Public and Environmen­tal Affairs, a Beijingbas­ed environmen­t NGO, said on Thursday.

It showed the comprehens­ive controls, including reducing coal consumptio­n, shutting down companies that pollute, limiting the use of vehicles and strict inspection, worked, he said, adding windy days also helped.

Compared with the southern region, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region needs to speed up. In 2017, the average PM2.5 in the region was 64, while in the Pearl River Delta it was 34 and in the Yangtze River Delta it was 44.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong