Chinese city choked by blanket of smog

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Schools were ordered to cancel class and operations were halted for public buses and the airport [Reuters]

Visibility in Harbin slashed to a few metres, forcing schools to close in scenes that underline nation’s pollution woes.

The Chinese city of Harbin has been blanketed by clouds of choking pollution, slashing visibility to a few metres, shutting schools and halting transport in scenes that underscored the nation’s environmental challenges.

Footage taken on Monday morning in the northeastern city showed a screen full of charcoal-brown smog.

Elementary and middle schools were ordered to cancel class and operations were halted for public buses, long-distance coaches and the airport, CCTV reports said. Highways were also shut, although multiple-car crashes were still reported.

The smog in Harbin, a city of more than 10 million people in far northeastern China, came as it activated its public heating system in advance of the frigid winter, the Beijing Times said.

Figures from monitoring stations in central Harbin showed concentrations of PM2.5 – tiny airborne particles considered the most harmful to health – reached 1,000 micrograms per cubic metre, 40 times the World Health Organisation’s recommended standard.

They began to fall in the early evening but the overall air quality index, a different measure, was still being given as 500, the maximum level on the Chinese scale, and described as “beyond index”.

The extremely polluted air came days after the government in Beijing announced that it plans to reinstate an odd-even car ban for days when the city’s air pollution reaches red-alert levels.

Under the plan, which China’s capital city employed during the 2008 Olympics and again in 2011, cars will only be allowed to drive on alternating days when severe air pollution persists for three or more days.

Pollution from rapid development and heavy coal use plagues wide swathes of China, prompting public criticism and pledges from the country’s new leadership to make improvements.

Speaking to Al Jazeera from Beijing on Monday, Peter Ford, of the Christian Science Monitor, said: “It was appalling last winter and it looks like this winter will be just as bad. That really does get those people living in these large cities in northeastern China very angry …, so it does get the government thinking about it.

“They have announced a number of measures for northeastern China this winter. They are going to try to control the growth, that is to build fewer cement factories, fewer steel mills, they are going to move four coal-fired central heating plants outside of Beijing and they are going to stop half the cars in Beijing from driving on the roads when things get really out of control.”


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