China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Aerospace expertise used to identify, track pollution

- By ZHAO LEI in Wuxi, Jiangsu zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

Abundant know-how is being adapted to help support environmen­tal efforts

China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp has begun to use the expertise gained in the space and defense sectors to help the government handle air pollution.

“The control and prevention of air pollution, especially the PM2.5, requires a sophistica­ted and systematic effort involving an interdisci­plinary combinatio­n of technologi­es,” said Zhou Xiang, chairman of CASIC Smart Industry Developmen­t Co, which specialize­s in planning and building smart cities.

The company is a subsidiary of the CASIC Second Academy, a major defense contractor that has rich experience managing complex, interdisci­plinary programs, along with all the technologi­es required in the environmen­tal effort, Zhou said, adding: “It can use its skills to help detect, monitor and analyze air pollution.”

The State-owned air-defense academy has abundant know-how and experience in systems engineerin­g, optoelectr­onics, sensors, equipment control, and data collection and analysis — all of which are essential in the effort to mitigate air pollution, he said.

“You can’t resolve air pollution problems if you are unable to accurately monitor and forecast them. We can offer different solutions to environmen­tal protection department­s for them to monitor and analyze emissions from manufactur­ing industries, vehicles and residentia­l areas,” he said at an intelligen­t industry forum on Thursday, the 60th anniversar­y of the founding of the academy.

Zhou’s company is working with a national-level key optics laboratory (also an academy subsidiary) to design instrument­s capable of identifyin­g every hazardous gas emitted by factories by analyzing their light spectrum. Four or five such instrument­s will enable environmen­tal protection authoritie­s to monitor an industrial park in real-time, for example, around-theclock and with less manpower and lower costs, he said.

To handle emissions from vehicles, CASIC Smart Industry Developmen­t has leaned on the Second Academy’s Zhou Xiang, knowledge of infrared and ultraviole­t tracking to develop equipment that can accurately nail cars dischargin­g excessive exhaust and then transmit the informatio­n back to a control center. Authoritie­s can then deal with the car’s owner.

The company has joined a demonstrat­ion program led by the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection that aims to monitor pollutants emitted by cars in about 30 cities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei province region. It also signed an agreement with the city of Chengdu, Sichuan province, to deploy the equipment at major traffic junctions in the city starting in 2018, Zhou said.

In addition, the company is able to take advantage of the academy’s leading status in weather radar and computer simulation technologi­es to forecast PM2.5 concentrat­ions and movements, he said.

Air pollution is one of the top concerns of the Chinese public. People living in large cities complained about thick haze consisting of PM2.5 particulat­e matter — particles smaller than 2.5 microns in diameter that can harm lungs and enter the bloodstrea­m — every winter over the past several years.

According to the ministry, PM2.5 is one of the biggest contributo­rs to air pollution in Chinese cities.

President Xi Jinping has pledged to bring “blue skies” back to the Chinese people, and the government has stepped up laws and regulation­s to punish polluters, forced factories to install pollutant-reducing devices and continues to encourage and support the use of greener cars and fuels.

In 2016, the average concentrat­ion of PM2.5 was at least 30 percent lower than in 2013 in three major city clusters — Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei, and the Yangtze River and Pearl River delta areas, according to the ministry.

You can’t resolve air pollution problems if you are unable to accurately monitor and forecast them.” chairman of CASIC Smart Industry Developmen­t Co

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