The Borneo Post

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

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SHANGHAI: 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 yesterday.

The 28 northern cities were ordered to cut concentrat­ions of small, breathable particles known as PM2.5 by 10-25 per cent during October 2017- March 2018. They have been curbing industrial output, thinning traffic and cracking down on coal use in a bid to limit smog build-ups.

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

But the ministry, citing meteorolog­ists, said unfavourab­le weather, including relatively warm temperatur­es, is expected to make smog dispersal more difficult 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 per cent on an annual basis for OctoberDec­ember, more than double its 25 per cent 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 Organisati­on ( WHO).

The capital, Beijing, saw PM2.5 drop 53.8 per cent during the three months. City environmen­tal officials 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. — Reuters

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