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79 Chinese cities hit by heavy smog

Nik Martin with Reuters
December 1, 2018

Authorities have warned residents to stay inside as thick smog shrouds dozens of Chinese cities. Officials are considering temporary driving bans and an extension to the shutdown of heavily polluting factories.

Thick fog engulfs Changzhou, China
Image: Getty Images/Lintao Zhang

Along with 78 other cities, China's capital, Beijing, was again blanketed in thick winter smog on Saturday, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Air pollution warnings were issued across the north, northwest and east of the country, forcing residents in many cities to curb outdoor activities due to the potential health risks.

Several Chinese cities struggled with high pollution levels throughout November, which in some instances forced the cancellation of flights and the closure of major highways.

Read more: China: Deadly chemical plant explosion hits Zhangjiakou

Lost in the smog

In Nanjing, an elderly couple got lost in the smog and wandered the city for nine hours before being rescued, the South China Morning Post reported.

The paper said conditions were likely to worsen over the weekend in Beijing, where schools and educational facilities have been ordered to cancel any sporting or outdoor events.

On Saturday evening, the concentration of small particulate matter, known as PM2.5, at Beijing's Temple of Heaven reached 193 micrograms per cubic meter, according to data from China's National Environmental Monitoring Center — 5 1/2 times the state's acceptable level.

As of November 30, five cities had issued red pollution warnings, the most severe in China's warning system, 73 had issued orange warnings, the second-most severe, and one city had issued a yellow alert, Xinhua said.

Read more: China's economy not opening up despite Beijing's assurances

Urgent measures introduced

The Chinese government this week forced at least 46 cities — including those in Tianjin, Hebei, Shanxi, Jiangsu and Anhui provinces — to adopt emergency measures to cut emissions.

Officials are now considering lengthening the shutdown of heavily polluting factories and the introduction of temporary driving bans.

Northern China often sees heavy smog over the winter, which runs from mid-November to mid-March, as homes and power utilities burn more coal for power and heating.

Research by the Chinese University of Hong Kong suggests air pollution kills 1 million Chinese each year and costs the economy 267 billion yuan (€34 billion, $38 billion.)

Read more: Dip in China's CO2 emissions sparks cautious optimism

Beijing ignored locally

Although the Chinese government has taken several steps to fight air pollution, many growth-obsessed local governments turn a blind eye to polluting enterprises they consider vital sources of jobs and economic growth.

Beijing now wants market regulators, graft watchdogs, police and the courts to play a more significant role in punishing polluters.

Meanwhile, the environment ministry this week accused companies and local governments of being "extremely stupid" by trying to cover up pollution violations.

The comment followed the misreporting of the spilling of nearly 70 tonnes of petrochemicals into the sea at the Quanzhou port in southeast Fujian province by one firm.

Last month, state media reported that officials in eastern Shandong province were caught throwing chemicals worth 46 million yuan into a river to disguise pollution levels.

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

Nik Martin is one of DW's team of business reporters based in Bonn.
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