The Borneo Post

Smog engulfs north China for fourth day; flights diverted

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SHANGHAI/BEIJING: A plane carrying the head of the world’s biggest oil exporter was prevented from landing in the Chinese capital of Beijing yesterday because of thick smog blanketing large parts of northern China.

Amin Nasser, chief executive of the Saudi Arabian oil producer Aramco, was due to attend an event on Saudi culture at Beijing’s National Museum, company officials said, but his plane was diverted after a fourth day of heavy smog led to the cancellati­on of as many as 181 flights.

China declared a ‘ war on pollution’ in 2014 amid concern its heavy industrial past was tarnishing its global reputation and holding back its future developmen­t.

But it has struggled to reverse the damage done by decades of breakneck economic growth, much of it based on the coalburnin­g power sector.

Despite months of efforts to hone its rapid response systems, air qual ity deteriorat­ed in parts of the region on Tuesday, with the environmen­t ministry warning that firms were flouting emergency restrictio­ns.

Some power plants and chemical producers had not scaled back operations in line with regulation­s, and drivers in Beijing had also been ignoring traffic restrictio­ns, according to China Environmen­tal News, the official publicatio­n of the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

The paper said as many as 24 cities had issued pollution ‘red alerts’ by Tuesday but, despite the implementa­tion of emergency measures, smog concentrat­ions had increased in some places.

They included several major cities in the industrial province of Hebei, which surrounds Beijing.

Red alerts are issued when an air quality index (AQI) is forecast to exceed 200 for more than four days in succession, 300 for more than two days or 500 for at least 24 hours.

In Handan, a major steel producer, the 24-hour average AQI at one monitoring station reached a record 780, according to envi ronment a l g roup Greenpeace. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo shows Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda attends a news conference at the BOJ headquarte­rs in Tokyo. For more than three years, BoJ policymake­rs have embarked on a bond-buying stimulus programme to try to keep interest rates...
File photo shows Bank of Japan (BOJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda attends a news conference at the BOJ headquarte­rs in Tokyo. For more than three years, BoJ policymake­rs have embarked on a bond-buying stimulus programme to try to keep interest rates...

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