China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Satellite network pinpoints sources of pollution

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@ chinadaily.com.cn

China will use a grid network and remote satellite sensing to better monitor and control air pollution, according to the country’s top environmen­tal authority.

The network will monitor concentrat­ions of PM2.5 — polluting particles with a diameter of 2.5 micrometer­s or less — in the 28 major cities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster by next month, the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t announced recently.

The region has been divided into 36,793 units, each measuring 9 square kilometers. With the help of remote sensing, 3,600 of the units with relatively high PM2.5 levels have been selected as key monitoring areas.

Zhao Qunying, deputy director of the ministry’s environmen­tal supervisio­n bureau, said the system may help compensate for the limited number of environmen­tal law enforcemen­t personnel in local government­s.

Limited law enforcemen­t personnel having to cover a very wide area has been a problem for local government­s and environmen­tal authoritie­s.”

deputy director of the environmen­tal supervisio­n bureau of the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t

Zhao Qunying,

“Limited law enforcemen­t personnel having to cover a very wide area has been a problem for local government­s and environmen­tal authoritie­s, especially at the prefecture and county levels,” he said. “The territorie­s of many counties spread for almost 1,000 sq km. But the county-level environmen­tal protection bureaus usually have only a few dozen employees, and sometimes little more than 10. They have a lot of difficulti­es covering the whole county in their monitoring and supervisio­n.”

Zhao said the grid network system could help pinpoint sources of PM2.5, allowing limited law enforcemen­t manpower to focus its efforts.

The ministry decided to adopt the system after a successful yearlong trial in Cangzhou, Hebei province. There were 126 grid units in the city chosen as key for air pollution monitoring, and Cangzhou appointed a “grid chief” for each of them, along with special supervisor­s.

“While chiefs draft rectificat­ion plans based on specific problems in their units, the supervisor­s conduct regular checks to urge implementa­tion,” the ministry said, adding that PM2.5 levels in the city have fallen significan­tly.

The ministry also said it will publicize air pollution problems, dispatch special teams and summon local government heads if progress in controllin­g air pollution in the grid units is inadequate.

The network will also be expanded to two other key areas for air pollution control. Eleven major cities on the Fenhe and Weihe river plains in Shanxi and Shaanxi provinces will be covered from next month, and 41 major cities in the Yangtze River Delta will be covered starting in February, the ministry said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States