Iran Daily

China says 28 northern cities met late 2017 anti-smog targets

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All 28 Chinese cities in a demanding winter anti-smog campaign met their air quality targets from October to December, but weather conditions could pose challenges in early 2018, the environmen­t ministry said.

The 28 northern cities were ordered to cut concentrat­ions of small, breathable particles known as PM2.5 by 1025 percent during October 2017-March 2018. They have been curbing industrial output, thinning traf¿c and cracking down on coal use in a bid to limit smog build-ups, Reuters reported.

The Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection (MEP) said that all the cities exceeded their targets in the ¿nal three months of 2017, with average concentrat­ions across the region hitting 71 micrograms per cubic meter, down 34.3 percent from a year earlier.

But the ministry, citing meteorolog­ists, said unfavorabl­e weather, including relatively warm temperatur­es, is expected to make smog dispersal more dif¿cult in January and February.

It said Shijiazhua­ng, one of China’s most polluted cities and the capital of heavily industrial Hebei province, saw the biggest improvemen­t in late 2017, with PM2.5 falling 54.8 percent on an annual basis for October-december, more than double its 25 percent target.

Average PM2.5 concentrat­ions in Shijiazhua­ng remained at 85 micrograms, higher than China’s 35 microgram standard as well as the 10 micrograms recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

The capital, Beijing, saw PM2.5 drop 53.8 percent during the three months. City environmen­tal of¿cials said last week that drier and windier weather conditions were a contributi­ng factor.

The six-month campaign to curb winter air pollution in northern China had appeared to start slowly, with only four of the 28 cities meeting their October targets.

But an inspection and enforcemen­t campaign — widely seen as China’s toughest to date — began to have a signi¿cant impact in November, even after the predominan­tly coal-¿red winter heating system was activated.

While China met its 2017 air quality targets, the winter campaign has not been without controvers­y, with businesses complainin­g about overzealou­s ‘one size ¿ts all’ crackdowns as well as gas supply disruption­s.

Residents have also complained about surging gas prices and supply shortages.

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