The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)
Engulfed by smog at start of 2017, China issues alerts
BEIJING AND other cities across northern and central China were shrouded in thick smog Monday, prompting authorities to delay dozens of flights and close highways.
The Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau extended an “orange alert”’ for heavy air pollution for three more days. Beijing’s smog had initially been forecast to lift by Monday. The “orange alert” is the third level, preceding a “red alert”, in China’s four-tiered warning system. On Sunday, 25 cities in China issued “red alerts” for smog, which triggers orders to close factories, schools and construction sites.
Air pollution readings in northern Chinese cities were many times above the World Health Organisation-designated safe level of 25 micrograms per cubic meter of PM 2.5, the tiny, toxic particles that damage lung tissue. The readings exceeded 400 by Monday afternoon in several cities in the northern province of Hebei.
Expressways in Shijiazhuang, Hebei’s capital, and more than a half-dozen other cities there were temporarily closed, according to notices posted on the official microblog of the province’s traffic police.
In the city of Zhengzhou, authorities ordered students from kindergarten through high school to stay home on Tuesday because of the smog. More than 300 flights out of the northern city of Tianjin were canceled Sunday due to poor visibility. Authorities have deployed teams of inspectors to check on polluting factories, reports said.
Germany’s Max Planck institute has estimated that smog has led to 1.4 million premature deaths per year in China.