China Daily

Hitting PM2.5 target ‘very difficult’

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Lack of determinat­ion on the part of local government­s to transform their industrial structures can be a major hindrance to controllin­g air pollution in northern China, especially as the country experience­s an economic slowdown, a national legislator said recently.

Wang Jinnan, an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g and president of the Chinese Academy for Environmen­tal Planning, made the comment in an interview with China Daily on the sidelines of the annual two sessions, which concluded last week.

He said the Fenhe-Weihe River Plain area, which encompasse­s 11 cities in Shanxi, Shaanxi and Henan provinces, has been listed as a key area for air pollution control.

Even though the area experience­d better air quality in 2018, it remains prone to smog because of the high level of pollution discharged from its extensive coal-reliant industries.

Last year, the average density of PM2.5 particulat­e matter in the area reached 58 micrograms per cubic meter, down by 10.8 percent yearon-year. In the month of January, however, the area saw density rise by 16.4 percent from the previous January to 128 mg / cu m, according to the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t.

The data for February has not been made public yet, but there have been signs showing a deteriorat­ing situation.

Wang said transformi­ng the industrial structure “is undoubtedl­y the fundamenta­l solution” for air pollution control in the region. The current heavy reliance on coal for energy and the transporta­tion system dominated by diesel trucks need to be adjusted to improve air quality, he said, adding that efforts should also be made to increase the total vegetated area to reduce kicked-up dust, which has been a major contributo­r to PM2.5.

A long-term road map for the transforma­tion is urgently needed in the area, he said, because without it many local government­s are passive and will not meet their targets.

China’s top environmen­tal watchdog set a target of reducing PM2.5 density by 4 percent year-on-year from Oct 1 to March 31 — the period that usually sees the worst air quality of the year because of heating — in the Fenhe-Weihe River Plain area.

Based on the current situation, it will be difficult for some cities in the area to hit the target, Wang said.

Every city in the area should draft medium- and long-term plans for energy transforma­tion, though this will be challengin­g in light of the economic slowdown, he said. “It’s very difficult. Very.” Wang, however, stressed that the transforma­tion is not only a requiremen­t for air pollution control, but also a must to achieve high-quality developmen­t. It’s important to make local government­s fully aware of the importance of the transforma­tion.

“If they are fully aware of the importance, they will be resolute in working on it,” he said.

If they are fully aware of the importance, they will be resolute in working on it.” Wang Jinnan, president of the Chinese Academy for Environmen­tal Planning

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