The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China’s ozone levels hit record high in June — Greenpeace

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SHANGHAI: Concentrat­ions of lung-damaging ozone hit a record high in China in June, rising 11 per cent from the same month last year, environmen­t group Greenpeace said yesterday, citing official data.

Despite China’s four-year battle against air pollution, ozone has become “an emerging health threat”, Greenpeace said.

Average levels in the capital Beijing stood at 120 micrograms per cubic metre in June, around double the rates in ozone hotspots like California and Mexico City.

China’s environmen­t ministry warned on Tuesday that it expected ozone pollution to be particular­ly high in the region surroundin­g Beijing over the next 10 days.

Ground-level ozone, known as “sunburn for the lungs”, is caused by the interactio­n of sunlight with nitrogen dioxide and volatile organic chemicals (VOCs).

It can lead to shortness of breath, coughing and inflamed airways, according to the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Children are at the greatest risk and prolonged exposure may cause asthma and abnormal lung developmen­t.

“Likely reasons for surging ozone levels include stubbornly high nitrogen dioxide emissions from heavy industry and transport, and increasing VOC emissions from a wide range of industries from petroleum refining, plastics manufactur­ing and other chemical industries, constructi­on, and from cars and trucks,” the Greenpeace report said.

Citing figures from the Global Burden of Disease database, Greenpeace said ozone exposure was responsibl­e for about 70,000 premature deaths in China in 2016.

A study published by Peking University in April said ozone concentrat­ions rose 40 per cent or more in 10 northern Chinese cities from 2014 to 2017, despite tough new measures to clean up industry and traffic.

The study said China’s efforts to cut floating particulat­e matter had actually increased the strength of sunlight, creating more ozone.

Experts had urged China to target ozone pollution in its latest three-year anti-smog plan released last month, but no special measures were included.

Vice environmen­t minister Zhao Yingmin said at a press briefing that while average ozone concentrat­ions rose 8 percent last year, hazardous floating particles known as PM2.5 remained the country’s priority. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows a man wearing a respirator­y protection mask walking towards an office building during the smog after a red alert was issued for heavy air pollution in Beijing’s central business district, China. — Reuters photo
File photo shows a man wearing a respirator­y protection mask walking towards an office building during the smog after a red alert was issued for heavy air pollution in Beijing’s central business district, China. — Reuters photo

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