The Borneo Post

Canned air and water-spraying drones — Smog remedies

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HONG KONG: As billions of people in Asia choke under polluted skies, authoritie­s have turned to waterdispe­rsing drones and outdoor air purifiers to improve air quality, while companies have tried to cash in by selling everything from canned air to lung-purifying teas.

Around 92 per cent of the population in the Asia Pacific region are exposed to levels of air pollution that pose a significan­t risk to their health, according to UN Environmen­t.

Here is a look at some of the ways those living under the haze try to limit its effects.

As public anger rises over toxic air, authoritie­s have turned to spraying water, which is thought to stick to pollutants and carry them to the ground. But tools such as water cannons have been criticised as having little effect and being a “band- aid” solution that distracts from root causes.

New Delhi — the world’s most polluted major city —tried in 2017 to use helicopter­s to sprinkle water over the city, but the choppers were not able to fly due to low visibility caused by smog.

In Bangkok, the government tried a raft of measures to combat a murky haze that blanketed the city for weeks in January, including spraying overpasses with water, cloud seeding and even deploying a fleet of water- dispersing drones.

Cloud- seeding is used to stimulate rain by injecting chemicals into clouds using rockets, cannons or aircraft, but the technique is not always successful.

An attempt by South Korea to create artificial rain to tackle air pollution in January failed, after an aircraft sent to seed clouds with silver iodide only produced several minutes of misty rain.

The northern Chinese city of Xi’an is experiment­ing with a giant air purifier the size of an industrial smokestack which can reduce PM2.5 concentrat­ion by 15 percent within 10 square kilometres, according to researcher­s.

Hong Kong this year opened a 3.7km tunnel equipped with an air purificati­on system touted as the largest of its kind in the world in terms of volume of air handled - 5.4 million cubic metres of vehicle exhaust every hour.

The government says it will be able to remove at least 80 percent of harmful particulat­es and nitrogen dioxide using large fans which suck exhaust into air purificati­on plants in three ventilatio­n buildings along the tunnel.

New Delhi last year announced a plan to install huge air purifiers at traffic intersecti­ons and mount air filters on the roofs of buses that trap pollutants as they move, according to Hindustan Times.

During particular­ly bad spates of air pollution, which tend to come during the winter, many residents in smoggy Chinese cities escape to cleaner places, such as resorts in the south of the country, for a temporary break and return after it has cleared.

Ctrip, China’s largest online travel agent, estimated in 2016 that every year, over a million residents of smoggy cities such as Beijing and Shanghai leave the country to escape the smog. — AFP

 ??  ?? A file photo shows a woman wearing a protective pollution mask walks on a street in Beijing. — AFP photo
A file photo shows a woman wearing a protective pollution mask walks on a street in Beijing. — AFP photo

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