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Milestone: In 2021,Chinese capital city Beijing makes clean air grade for first time since air quality monitored

beijingwalker

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Milestone: In 2021,Chinese capital city Beijing makes clean air grade for first time since air quality was monitored
  • Beijing’s levels of PM2.5 and other key pollutants meet national standards in 2021
  • Results reflect two decades of efforts but more needs to be done, official says
Published: 9:20pm, 4 Jan, 2022

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China’s capital met national air quality standards for the first time last year, reaching a milestone in its anti-pollution drive, according to Beijing’s environmental protection bureau.
But the levels of particularly fine pollutants remain well above World Health Organization recommendations.

The bureau said on Tuesday that concentrations of small, lung-damaging particles known as PM2.5 averaged 33 micrograms per cubic metre in Beijing in 2021, 13 per cent lower than in 2020 and a 63 per cent drop compared with 2013, when the country started releasing air quality data.

The average last year was also below the interim national standard of 35mcg but above the 5mcg recommended by the WHO.

Bureau deputy head Yu Jianhua said the pollution had declined despite growth in the capital.

“Over the past two decades, Beijing’s GDP, the number of permanent residents and vehicles and energy consumption have all increased but the concentrations of air pollutants keep decreasing,” Yu said.

Levels of ozone in the capital, which stood at 149mcg last year, also met China’s national standard of 160mcg. In addition, levels of PM10 particles fell 49 per cent, sulphur dioxide 89 per cent, nitrogen dioxide 54 per cent and ozone 19 per cent last year compared with 2013.

But Yu also said the gains had to be cemented.

“Tackling air pollution is a long-term, complex and arduous process and it cannot be achieved in just one battle,” he said.

The bureau attributed much of the drop in 2021 to a series of action plans in the previous decade as well as emissions control measures, including cutting coal consumption, relocating heavy industry and reducing transport emissions.

In February, environmental authorities said lockdowns and travel restrictions were not major factors in the air quality gains.
The release of the data comes just one month ahead of the Winter Olympics in Beijing and its neighbouring city of Zhangjiakou in Hebei province.

Ma Jun, director of the Beijing-based Institute of Public & Environmental Affairs (IPE), said the results were a “breakthrough”.
“When Beijing first released PM2.5 data in January 2013, the concentration was 89.5mcg, far beyond China’s interim national standard,” Ma said.

“Since then, China has implemented anti-air pollution campaigns and required cities to release their air quality information … Now the level of PM2.5 has dropped below 35mcg and the result deserves congratulations.”

In January 2013, levels of PM2.5 particles in Beijing hit 993mcg, and the severe smog prompted Chinese leaders to take serious action.

China issued a five-year plan to tackle air pollution that year, aiming to cut the number of heavy air pollution days nationwide and achieve better air quality in key industrial areas, including the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.
Between 2013 and 2017, Hebei phased out 137 million tonnes of iron and steel capacity and 45 million tonnes of coal capacity as part of the campaign.

That was followed by a three-year clean air action plan from 2018 and another action plan launched in 2021 to improve the country’s air and water quality. China aims to basically eliminate heavily polluted days by 2025.

He Kebin, dean of Tsinghua University’s school of environment, said neighbouring provinces played an important role in improving Beijing’s air quality from 2013 to 2021 and would continue to do so as further gains became harder to make.

 
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Problem fixing, result delivering government VS "democracy"

Ah yes over 10 years in the making due to the US Embassy squealing on your government's hiding of the seriousness of your PM2.5 pollution issue.


China Asks Other Nations Not to Release Its Air Data
 
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Ah yes over 10 years in the making due to the US Embassy squealing on your government's hiding of the seriousness of your pollution issue.


You are so delusional, Chinese public started to complain about the the pollution and smog much earlier than US even knew there was a problem in Beijing, along with water crisis and repeated sandstorms, they hit the headline news on daily basis in Beijing, we live in the city, no one reads US embassy reading, we wake up the look out of window with our own eyes. we lived in that reality, not like you Americans, live in your delusions.
After facing the public outcry, the government started to work its butt off trying to fix those seemingly unsolvable problems, 三北防护林, North protection forest belt was built all along the Mongolian borders and miraculously sandstorms are gone, for water crisis, China bulit the south-north water diversion project, which is the biggest engineering project in the human history, now water is just so abundant and no longer a concern.
Smog is the last problem appeared caused by heavy industries and car exhaust in Beijing, now it's also almost being fixed, factories had all been moved out of the city and strict car emmission rules were imposed for a decade.

Check out US, you talk a lot , but no major issues can be fixed, gun violence, racism, drug problem, rundown infrastructure, hate crimes.... the list goes on endlessly.
 
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You are so delusional, Chinese public started to complain about the the pollution and smog much earlier than US even knew there was a problem in Beijing, along with water crisis and repeated sandstorms, they hit the headline news on daily basis in Beijing, we live in the city, no one reads US embassy reading

Oh are you going to say the pollution suddenly got bad overnight in around 2011 and the Chinese Government suddenly sprang to life to fix it due to sudden Chinese citizen demand just at around the same time the US embassy started getting publicity for posting PM 2.5 pollution counts?

We all know the Chinese government knew there was a severe problem.
When were those Beijing Olympics again...2008...don't you remember all the efforts to clear the skies so all the athletes wouldn't choke.

Then when the Olympics were over the usual bad skies rolled back in and any complaints went unheeded...until a few years later when the US embassy started embarrassing the CCP by posting the PM2.5 numbers...and caused an uproar...and some action to be taken.

 
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Oh are you going to say the pollution suddenly got bad overnight in around 2011 and the Chinese Government suddenly sprang to life to fix it due to sudden Chinese citizen demand just at around the same time the US embassy started getting publicity for posting PM 2.5 pollution counts.

We all know the Chinese government knew there was a severe problem.
When were those Beijing Olympics again...2008...don't you remember all the efforts to clear the skies so all the athletes wouldn't choke.

Then when the Olympics were over the usual bad skies rolled back in and any complaints went unheeded...until a few years later when the US embassy started embarrassing the CPP by posting the PM2.5 numbers...and caused some action to be taken.


the problem didn't appear overnight, it appeared gradually as more heavy industry was created and more people got cars over time. its a symptom of industrialization as all other industrialized nations went through. the population knew of increasing issues well before the us said anything. nor did the chinese government take action because of the us specifically.

you give yourself way too much credit. just because you did not hear about it before the us starting crying about it, doesn't mean the local population didn't know about it. Just because the west wasn't shedding crocodile tears doesn't mean the locals weren't voicing their concern.

the government did take action during beijing 2008, it was a temporary fix as we all know, they temporarily banned some heavy industries in the area and fired off cloud seeding rockets. it was never advertise to the public as anything other than a temporary fix while they worked on a more permanent fix.

you claims that any complaints post 2008 went unheeded until the us posted pm2.5 numbers is patently false since beijingwalker clearly listed some of the continuing action that china took, projects like the water transfer project was literally discussed in the 50s and some parts of it completed in the early 2000s. the tree planting project started in the late 70s and isnt expected to be completed til 2050. the chinese plan projects that span decades to a century or more, not because the us fake cries about an issue.
 
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you give yourself way too much credit. just because you did not hear about it before the us starting crying about it, doesn't mean the local population didn't know about it.

Who says the people didn't know about it? They have eyes and could see it. The thing is the Chinese government was not posting PM2.5 numbers and others like the US embassy were.

What was the Chinese Government afraid of with those PM2.5 numbers since it was actively asking foreign embassies to stop posting them. Why should they care about some figure on the corner of an embassy webpage?

Unless of course the curious/concerned Chinese people were peeking at the page to see the number. :enjoy:
 
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Oh are you going to say the pollution suddenly got bad overnight in around 2011 and the Chinese Government suddenly sprang to life to fix it due to sudden Chinese citizen demand just at around the same time the US embassy started getting publicity for posting PM 2.5 pollution counts?

We all know the Chinese government knew there was a severe problem.
When were those Beijing Olympics again...2008...don't you remember all the efforts to clear the skies so all the athletes wouldn't choke.

Then when the Olympics were over the usual bad skies rolled back in and any complaints went unheeded...until a few years later when the US embassy started embarrassing the CCP by posting the PM2.5 numbers...and caused an uproar...and some action to be taken.


China's air pollution pattern matches those of Japan and Korea. It is related to industrialization and private vehicle ownership.

I would be gnawing at my fingers if pollution would be the result of stuff other than industrialization. Like India.
Who says the people didn't know about it? They have eyes and could see it. The thing is the Chinese government was not posting PM2.5 numbers and others like the US embassy were.

What was the Chinese Government afraid of with those PM2.5 numbers since it was actively asking foreign embassies to stop posting them. Why should they care about some figure on the corner of an embassy webpage?

Unless of course the curious Chinese people were peeking at the page to see the number. :enjoy:

So, US were busy killing Iraqi and Afghan babies and women while valiantly fighting for sparkling PM2.5 results for China. What went wrong?
 
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It's just so ridiculous to attribute China's success in solving and curbing public woes to US reporting. stupid Americans also take the credit of China's fast economic development.
US also reports their domestic problems, how come they can never be fixed by US government?
 
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If the US Embassy in India could do the same on air quality for the city of New Delhi, I would give the credit to the USA.

Well I guess you should immediately start bowing to the US Government now because if you waltz on over to the US embassy page in India you can see the numbers.

click on the down arrows on the cities listed and you will see the current reading.



I would be gnawing at my fingers if pollution would be the result of stuff other than industrialization. Like India.

That's why lots of Asians in China/India/Whatever are moving West


Well I'm glad you are pointing that out too.

how come only in Beijing it got fixed?

Fixing bad Government PR obviously
 
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