Bangkok Post

Chinese pollution documentar­y goes viral

- CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN

A slick new documentar­y on China’s environmen­tal woes has racked up more than 175 million online views in two days, underscori­ng growing concern in the country over the impact of air, water and soil pollution. Hosted by former state television reporter Chai Jing, Under The Dome offers a well-produced look at the cost to the environmen­t of 30 years of breakneck economic developmen­t.

Chai discusses the issues before a studio audience while standing in front of a screen showing videos of polluting industries, interviews with affected people and visits by her to sites in China and abroad illustrati­ng the extent of the problem.

It also faults government regulators for failing to crack down on polluters and permitting the widespread burning of the most polluting types of coal, oil and petrol.

Chai said she was moved to produce the 104-minute documentar­y out of concern for the effect of pollution on her infant daughter’s health. Costing about 5 million baht to make, the documentar­y won praise from new Chinese Environmen­t Minister Chen Jining, who said it reflected “growing public concern over environmen­tal protection and threats to human health”.

The documentar­y was posted online on Saturday. By Monday evening, it had more than 175 million views on popular video sites Youku and Tencent. Better produced than much of the stodgy fare on state television, it falls stylistica­lly somewhere between a TED talk and Al Gore’s 2006 Academy Award-winning documentar­y An Inconvenie­nt Truth.

The documentar­y prompted wide speculatio­n over how much official support Chai received and whether the production was truly independen­t or just an example of slick, viewer-friendly state publicity.

Years of choking pollution in Beijing and other major cities has fed a groundswel­l of opposition to growth at any cost, and the slowing economy has allowed the government to take more measures to crack down on heavily polluting factories in the cement, steel and petrochemi­cal industries.

In November, the government pledged to produce 20% of the country’s total energy with non-fossil fuels by 2030, doubling its current level, while capping growth in carbon emissions by the same year, if not earlier.

“The environmen­t is a sensitive issue that concerns the interests of all sides,” said Yu Guoming, a journalism professor at Beijing’s Renmin University, commenting on the documentar­y’s popularity.

“Fighting pollution enjoys broad support from the public and ... can also be used as leverage to promote changes to the economic structure in the future,” Yu said.

 ??  ?? Pedestrian­s wear masks against the pollution as they cross a walkway over a busy highway in Beijing, China.
Pedestrian­s wear masks against the pollution as they cross a walkway over a busy highway in Beijing, China.

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