The Manila Times

Smog grounds over 150 flights in Chinese capital

- AFP

BEIJING: More than 150 flights to and from Beijing were cancelled or delayed on Tuesday as a thick cloud of acrid smog shrouded the city, with US figures saying that the pollution was so bad that it was off the scale.

The national meteorolog­ical center said that the Chinese capital had been hit by thick fog that reduced visibility to as little as 200 meters in some parts of the city, while official data judged air quality to be “good.”

But the US Embassy, which has its own pollution measuring system, said on its Twitter feed that the concentrat­ion of the smallest, most dangerous particles in the air was “beyond index” for most of the morning.

The US system measures particles in the air of 2.5 micrometer­s or less, known as PM2.5, considered the most dangerous for people’s health.

Tuesday’s reading on its air quality index, which rates anything over 150 as unhealthy, over 200 as very unhealthy and over 300 as hazardous, breached the upper limit of 500, at which it stops giving figures.

Meanwhile, the Beijing Environmen­tal Bureau, which currently bases its air quality informatio­n on particles of 10 micrometer­s or larger, known as PM10, said that the air quality in the capital was “good.”

A spokesman for the bureau would not comment when contacted by Agence France-presse.

According to Beijing Internatio­nal Airport’s website, 155 flights were delayed or cancelled on Tuesday. Air France and Lufthansa flights coming from Paris and Tokyo, respective­ly, were among those grounded.

The frequent discrepanc­y between US Embassy readings and official data on pollution in Beijing has caused huge public anger as more and more residents worry about their health.

In apparent response to public concern, authoritie­s last week said that they would start publishing hourly updates of the PM2.5 measure before the Lunar New Year starting on January 23, but those measuremen­ts have not yet begun.

Internatio­nal organizati­ons, including the United Nations, list Beijing as one of the most polluted cities in the world, mainly due to its growing energy consumptio­n, much of which is still fueled by coal, and car usage.

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