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Thick Choking Smog in Beijing Triggers 72 Hour “Red Alert”

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The Beijing government issues the capital’s first ever pollution ”red alert” on Tuesday.

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BEIJING – A grey soupy haze subsumed Beijing’s unique landmarks, convenience stores sold air-filtering masks at brisk rates and health-food stores promoted pear juice as a traditional Chinese tonic for the lungs.

Some residents took a smog holiday away from Beijing on Tuesday as the Chinese capital launched restrictions under its first red alert for pollution, closing schools, suspending factories and keeping half the vehicles off the streets.

Although Beijing has in recent years seen smog at much worse levels than Tuesday’s, the latest bout of pollution was the first to trigger a red alert under a two-year-old system that requires a forecast at the outset of at least 72 hours of consecutive high pollution.


Vehicles travel on the Guomao bridge (bottom L) as the Central Business District (CBD) area is seen amid heavy smog after the city issued its first ever "red alert" for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer

Vehicles travel on the Guomao bridge (bottom L) as the Central Business District (CBD) area is seen amid heavy smog after the city issued its first ever “red alert” for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer


Rapid industrial growth and car ownership over the past decade or more have led to high levels of pollution in major urban areas and Chinese researches have identified the problem as a major source of unrest.

Certain weather conditions can exacerbate the problem.

Environment Minister Chen Jining called a special meeting late on Monday to urge greater vigilance against pollution in Beijing and nearby cities and he increased the number of environmental inspection teams to 12, ThePaper.cn, a state-backed news website, reported.

Smog has been a public health concern in Beijing for years but the government’s response has come under extra scrutiny in the past week because it faced heavy criticism for not issuing a red alert during an earlier episode of hazardous smog.

A red alert means 30 percent of vehicles are ordered off the roads, heavy vehicles banned, schools advised to cancel classes, businesses recommended to allow flexible working hours and all “large-scale, outdoor activities” should be stopped.


A boy wearing a mask sits on the shoulders of a man as they watch a flag-raising ceremony amid heavy smog at the Tiananmen Square, after the city issued its first ever "red alert" for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer

A boy wearing a mask sits on the shoulders of a man as they watch a flag-raising ceremony amid heavy smog at the Tiananmen Square, after the city issued its first ever “red alert” for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer


“This measure reflects that the government, at least, has the courage to face this problem,” said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs, a Chinese environmental group, referring to the red alert.

“Before, they were more or less somewhat reluctant to acknowledge the problem. Now there’s a willingness to face this problem directly.”

The red alert has been imposed until Thursday. Environmental group Greenpeace called it “a welcome sign of a different attitude from the Beijing government”.

‘FEELS LIKE CHEMICAL WARFARE’

Bernhard Schwartländer, the World Health Organization’s representative in China, said the alert “means, first and foremost, that the Beijing authorities are taking air quality, and related health issues, very seriously”.

The Beijing City Emergency Office said “still weather, reduced cold temperatures and an increase in humidity” prompted the alert, the Xinhua state news agency reported.

In the northern city of Taiyuan, six people were killed and four injured in a 33-vehicle pileup on a highway cloaked in smog, the Xinhua said.


The China Central Television (CCTV) building and the Central Business District (CBD) area are seen amid heavy smog after the city issued its first ever "red alert" for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer

The China Central Television (CCTV) building and the Central Business District (CBD) area are seen amid heavy smog after the city issued its first ever “red alert” for air pollution, in Beijing, China, December 8, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer


Some people in Beijing tried to dodge the restrictions. State media showed a policeman removing paper stuck over the last, odd, digit of a car’s license plate.

By late afternoon, the U.S. embassy’s monitoring station recorded “hazardous” air quality.

Many city residents donned industrial-strength face masks.

“I feel like I’m engaged in chemical warfare,” one commuter said on social media.

Still, the ruling Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, without a hint of irony, praised China’s contribution to fighting climate change in a commentary written to coincide with climate talks in Paris.

“People everywhere are looking forward to China’s continuous progress on the road to green development, acting as a model for the world to tackle the challenge of climate change,” the newspaper said.

– (Reuters)

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Beijing slashes traffic under pollution red alert

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