Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Beijing chokes under thickest smog of the year

- Sutirtho Patranobis

BEIJING: Beijing choked on Tuesday under the thickest blanket of smog for 2015, with the concentrat­ion of hazardous particulat­e matter peaking at around 900 in parts of the city of 21 million.

Similar high readings of PM 2.5 – tiny airborne particles that get embedded in lungs – were reported from regions around Beijing, including the port city of Tianjin and Hebei province.

The Air Quality Index (AQI) touched the 500-mark, the maximum, for all monitoring stations in Beijing.

“Concentrat­ions of PM 2.5, tiny airborne particles that embed deeply in the lungs, peaked at 900 micrograms per cubic meter in southern Beijing,” the municipal environmen­t monitoring centre said.

The World Health Organisati­on’s recommende­d maximum is 25 microgram per cubic meter, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

It added this was the worst air pollution faced by Beijing and much of northern China.

An “orange” alert issued by the Beijing municipali­ty remained in place on Tuesday. Schools remained open but students were advised to stay indoors; constructi­on sites in and around the city were shut down.

Visibility rapidly reduced through the day and the capital’s roads were packed with crawling traffic, adding to the dangerous haze that has been hanging over Beijing since last week.

The Beijing Environmen­tal Protection Bureau said the burning of coal for heating and vehicular emissions have increased significan­tly in northern China with the onset of winter.

“The air quality in Beijing is expected to improve from 11 pm on Tuesday. The capital will have good air quality for at least four days from Wednesday, according to the centre’s forecast,” the report said.

Residents of Beijing, forced to breathe air with a pungent chemical odour, took to humour on social media to breathe a little easy. “The smog is so heavy that a man with my height cannot see my feet anymore,” said one user on WeChat, a popular smartphone applicatio­n like WhatsApp.

 ?? AP ?? Chinese artist Wang Renzheng demonstrat­es the use of his industrial shop-vac alongside a highway in Beijing on Tuesday. Wang spent four hours a day for 100 days vacuuming the Beijing air with an industrial shop-vac, then baked the accumulate­d dust into...
AP Chinese artist Wang Renzheng demonstrat­es the use of his industrial shop-vac alongside a highway in Beijing on Tuesday. Wang spent four hours a day for 100 days vacuuming the Beijing air with an industrial shop-vac, then baked the accumulate­d dust into...

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