Beijing issues first smog red alert
Local officials restrict traffic, close building sites to ease pollution
BEIJING — Believe it or not, the air quality in the Chinese capital is actually improving. Just not very fast.
On Monday, the Beijing municipal government issued its first “red alert” for smog, urging schools to close, restricting traffic and closing down construction sites for three days starting Tuesday.
The decision underlines what everybody knows: decades of unbridled economic growth, corruption and utter disregard for environmental safety have combined to produce some of the deadliest air in planetary history.
But what is perhaps less well known is that the capital’s air is heading for what could be its best year in more than a decade.
And perhaps, somewhere in the choking smog that settled over Beijing this week, there is the smallest sliver of a silver lining: at least the government is finally taking some action, in response to public pressure.
Heavy smog has settled over Beijing from Sunday night and is forecast to intensify through Thursday, prompting the government to impose the highest level of alert on its four-colour scale for the first time.
Yet by the city’s terrible standards, the air quality has been far worse: concentration of PM2.5 small particles were measured at 224 micrograms per cubic metre at 8 p.m. Monday, classified merely as “very unhealthy” by international guidelines, which recommend that people with heart or lung disease, older adults and children to avoid all physical activity outdoors.
Last week, the concentration of PM2.5 had been much higher — more than 500 micrograms per cubic metre at one point, worse than “hazardous” and pretty much off the scale as far as those guidelines go.
That’s more than 20 times World Health Organization recommended levels — yet the city government’s alert level had been maintained at “orange.”
On Sunday, Environmental Protection Minister Chen Jining vowed to punish agencies and officials for any failure to quickly implement a pollution emergency response plan, the state-run Global Times tabloid reported.
“This year is still on track to be by far the best for air pollution on record, but the fact that these horrendous episodes can still happen shows how far there is to go to solve the problem,” said Lauri Myllyvirta, an energy campaigner at Greenpeace International.
Under the current rules, cars with odd and even number plates will be kept off the roads on alternate days, and some industrial enterprises will have to close. On social media, some users welcomed the move to impose a red alert, but others remained unconvinced that the government would impose costs on powerful industrial interests.
“Can you not treat us like we are fools,” one user posted. “Dare you close down all the coal and chemical enterprises tomorrow?”
Last week, there was even more anger about an issue that ranks toward the top of Chinese citizens’ concerns.
“The perks of China’s development are not shared by all its citizens, but its ill effects are tasted by everyone,” one user wrote in a post later deleted by censors.