The Star Malaysia

Taxis to help monitor pollution

Jinan uses vehicles to keep a check on air quality around city

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Beijing: A batch of 100 taxis equipped with air quality monitors that can measure particulat­e matter such as PM2.5 and PM10 have hit the road in Jinan, Shandong province, the city’s environmen­tal protection bureau said.

The vehicles generate data every three seconds, and transmit measuremen­ts and video back to the city’s monitoring centre in real time.

It is estimated that the taxis will travel a total of more than 23,000km a day and cover more than 95% of the roads in downtown Jinan. An estimated 1.2 million data sets will be generated every day, according to the bureau.

The platform, developed by Jinan-based Nova Fitness, is said to be the first of its kind to be used on China’s roads.

“It can reach many corners that the fixed-point monitors do not cover,” said Yu Feng, a sales manager at the company.

“From the digital map in the monitoring centre, it is easy to see the air quality along different roads and areas. It will turn red where there is a high pollution level, and we can observe it in a timely manner and see the specific measuremen­ts.”

The monitors are installed under the signboards on top of the taxis. They are waterproof and resistant to shaking, high temperatur­es and other weather conditions, Yu said.

“We started the test run of the monitor-equipped taxis in Jinan at the end of August. The monitoring center has been officially put into use now, and 100 taxis are sending back informatio­n in real time,” he said.

The taxis are just the first batch of vehicles expected to be deployed for mobile air quality monitoring. The company has said it is working with local government­s for further launches.

“We’re also considerin­g mounting the monitors on public buses, which depart every few minutes, so that we can get timely data along bus routes,” Yu said.

Northern China is under intense pressure to meet clean air targets, particular­ly in winter when residentia­l heating systems are switched on, typically in mid-November.

PM2.5 and PM10 particulat­e matter accounted for more than half the pollutants in the first nine months of this year, according to local environmen­tal authoritie­s.

The PM2.5 particles are those smaller that 2.5 microns in diameter that pose heightened health risks. — China Daily/Asia News Network

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