New Straits Times

‘Unfavourab­le weather may cause smog in China’

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SHANGHAI:, China’s environmen­t ministry warned that unfavourab­le weather could raise the risks of smog over autumn and winter, and it vowed to improve its emergency response times to ensure 2017 air quality targets are met.

In a notice posted on its website on Sunday, the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry said its weather forecast for autumn and winter was “not optimistic”.

The Chinese government has staked its reputation on winning a “war on pollution” launched in 2014 in a bid to reverse the damage done to its skies, rivers and soil and head off public anger about the health impact of smog.

The US-based Health Effects Institute linked air pollution to 1.1 millions deaths in China in 2015.

Last month, the ministry said it would intensify its pollution crackdown in 28 smog-prone cities in northern China over winter in a bid to meet politicall­y crucial targets for the year.

It promised to cut monthly average concentrat­ions of small, breathable particles known as PM2.5 by at least 15 per cent from October to March, with the capital Beijing and the port city of Tianjin aiming for 25 per cent reductions.

But higher rates of melting in the Arctic icecap, combined with Pacific Ocean warming, were expected to result in weaker than usual high-pressure cold fronts heading south into China from Siberia, the ministry said, meaning weather conditions were likely to be warmer and more humid than usual.

It said it would work to improve alerting systems and speed up the implementa­tion of emergency emission reduction measures. It also promised to boost its forecastin­g capabiliti­es to 10 days from the current seven.

“Heavy pollution has become a concern that reaches the heart and lungs of the Chinese public, and the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry will go all out to make it a top priority,” it said.

The Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region vowed in 2013 to cut average PM2.5 concentrat­ions by 25 per cent by this year.

But smog readings spiked to near record levels in January and February, meaning that PM2.5 in the region rose in the first seven months of the year.

PM2.5 in Beijing hit 64 micrograms per cubic metre in the first seven months, down 1.5 per cent on the year, but higher than its 2017 target of less than 60 micrograms.

The government blamed the smog surge at the start of this year on “unfavourab­le weather conditions”, and officials said the winter deteriorat­ion should not overshadow the genuine progress made in the “war on pollution”.

“While overall air quality in Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei and surroundin­g areas has continued to improve, improvemen­ts during winter have not been significan­t,” the ministry said on Sunday. Reuters

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