Ottawa Citizen

Smog snarls life in Chinese city

Pollution forces school closures, halts flights and buses in Harbin

- LOUISE WATT

BEIJING Visibility shrank to less than half a football field and small-particle pollution soared to a record 40 times higher than an internatio­nal safety standard in one northern Chinese city as the region entered its high-smog season.

The manager for U.S. jazz singer Patti Austin, meanwhile, said the singer had cancelled a concert in Beijing because of an asthma attack likely linked to pollution.

Winter typically brings the worst air pollution to northern China because of a combinatio­n of weather conditions and an increase in the burning of coal for homes and municipal heating systems, which usually starts on a specific date. For the large northern city of Harbin, the city’s heating systems kicked in on Sunday, and on Monday visibility there was less than 50 metres, according to state media.

“I couldn’t see anything outside the window of my apartment, and I thought it was snowing,” Wu Kai, 33, a housewife and mother of a baby boy, said in a telephone interview from Harbin. “Then I realized it wasn’t snow. I have not seen the sun for a long time.”

She said her husband went to work in a mask, that he could barely see a few metres ahead of him and that his usual bus had stopped running.

“It’s scary, too dangerous. How could people drive or walk on such a day?”

The density of fine particulat­e matter, PM2.5, used as an indicator of air quality was well above 600 micrograms per cubic metre — including several readings of exactly 1,000 — for several monitoring stations in Harbin, according to figures posted on the website of China’s environmen­tal protection agency. They were the first known readings of 1,000 since China began releasing figures on PM2.5 in January 2012, and it was not immediatel­y clear if the devices used for monitoring could give readings higher than that.

A safe level under WHO guidelines is 25 micrograms per cubic metre.

Primary and middle schools and some highways were closed, said authoritie­s in the city, which is in China’s northernmo­st province bordering Russia. At least 40 flights to destinatio­ns in southern China and Beijing among others were cancelled or postponed at Harbin’s Taiping Internatio­nal Airport on Monday morning.

Austin’s management team said the 63-year-old singer had been treated in a hospital Friday morning for an asthma attack in combinatio­n with a respirator­y infection. She returned to her hotel later Friday to rest, but was unable to perform at her Beijing concert scheduled for Friday evening. Her Saturday night concert in Shanghai went ahead.

Her manager, Barry Orms, said Monday that Austin, an asthma sufferer, would have been “affected by the amount of pollution.” He said it wasn’t their goal to place blame, and “Patti has expressed our belief that the Chinese government can be a leader in this very important issue.”

On the morning ahead of her concert Friday, Beijing’s air was visibly polluted, with the city’s environmen­tal monitoring centre warning children, the elderly and those with respirator­y illnesses to reduce outdoor activity.

Last month, China’s cabinet released an action plan that aims to make a small reduction in the country’s heavy reliance on coal to below 65 per cent of total energy usage by 2017. According to Chinese government statistics, coal consumptio­n accounted for 68.4 per cent of total energy use in 2011.

 ?? AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman walks in the smog in Harbin, northeaste­rn China, Monday, as small-particle pollution hit levels 40 times higher than internatio­nal standards.
AFP/GETTY IMAGES A woman walks in the smog in Harbin, northeaste­rn China, Monday, as small-particle pollution hit levels 40 times higher than internatio­nal standards.

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