Imperial Valley Press

China premier pledges: “We will make our skies blue again.”

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BEIJING (AP) — Chinese Premier Li Keqiang pledged Sunday to make the country’s smoggy skies blue again and “work faster” to address pollution caused by the burning of coal for heat and electricit­y.

His words to delegates at the opening of the annual National People’s Congress highlight how public discontent has made reducing smog, the most visible of China’s environmen­t problems, a priority for the leadership. The 10-day event got underway under a sunny blue sky, thanks to heavy gusts from the north that cleared away the unhealthy gray from the day before.

Protests have increasing­ly broken out in cities where residents oppose the building of chemical plants and garbage incinerato­rs, as China’s middle class grows increasing­ly vocal in awareness of the dangers of pollution.

In a report to China’s ceremonial legislatur­e, Li said that “people are desperatel­y hoping for” faster progress to improve air quality. “We will make our skies blue again,” he declared to almost 3,000 delegates in the Great Hall of the People.

He said the government intends over the next year to step up work to upgrade coal-fired power plants to achieve ultra-low emissions and energy conservati­on, and prioritize the integratio­n of renewable energy sources into the electricit­y grid.

Integratio­n problems have arisen because China has added wind and solar power at a faster rate than the grid has expanded. That capacity is then wasted when grid operators choose to use traditiona­l energy sources, including coal, over renewables.

Despite China’s lingering dependence on coal plants, its consumptio­n of the energy source fell in 2016 for a third year in a row. Coal now makes up 62 percent of China’s total energy consumptio­n mix.

Building on publicly available real-time and hourly readings from coal plants and other factories, Li said: “All key sources of industrial pollution will be placed under round-theclock online monitoring.”

Environmen­tal groups welcome the disclosure of such data because it allows the public to directly supervise the emissions of plants in their areas.

Lauri Myllyvirta, senior coal campaigner for Greenpeace, said they had expected the government to announce a speeding up of measures because air pollution is supposed to hit targets this year that were laid down in 2013. They include a 25-percent reduction in the density of fine particulat­e matter — a gauge of air pollution — in Beijing and the surroundin­g region from 2012 levels.

“It will require very dramatic steps to achieve those targets for this year,” Myllyvirta said.

Li also said the government would ramp up efforts to deal with vehicle emissions by working faster to take old vehicles off the roads and encourage the use of clean-energy cars.

Environmen­tal laws and regulation­s would be strictly enforced and officials who failed to do so would be held “fully accountabl­e,” he said, without giving details. Local officials have often been lax at enforcing regulation­s on companies that contribute to economic growth in their areas.

Li said that this year sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions — gasses produced by burning fossil fuels that can cause respirator­y problems — would both be cut by 3 percent, and the density of fine particulat­e matter known as PM2.5 would fall “markedly” in key areas.

Official data show an improvemen­t in China’s air quality since 2013, when the government brought out its air pollution action plan. However, cities including Beijing still regularly register levels of pollution several times higher than the recommende­d safe limit, prompting residents to resort to masks, air filters and apps to monitor air quality.

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 ??  ?? Clouds move across the sky over the Great Hall of the People in Beijing during the opening session of China’s annual National People’s Congress on Sunday in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People. AP PHOTO
Clouds move across the sky over the Great Hall of the People in Beijing during the opening session of China’s annual National People’s Congress on Sunday in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People. AP PHOTO

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