Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Beijing clears the air as pollution purge yields 256 blue-sky days

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 02 December 2008
BEIJING officials claimed yesterday they have already reached their target number of 256 "blue-sky days" this year, with the help of ambitious environmental measures, which the city imposed to cut emissions for the Olympic Games.
China's notoriously polluted capital of 17 million people reached the clean-air day target on Sunday – 31 days ahead of schedule.

Du Shaozhong, deputy director of Beijing's municipal environmental protection bureau, said: "The quality of our city'
s air has shown constant improvement over the past ten years."

Beijing had only 100 blue-sky days in 1998, when it introduced a clean-air campaign and began investing more than £10 billion to improve air quality.

The long-term measures, as well as more drastic efforts taken ahead of the Olympic Games in August, helped to reach the goal, the bureau said.

Beijing pulled half the city's 3.3 million vehicles off the roads, halted most construction and closed some factories in the capital and surrounding provinces ahead of the Games. Car emissions, Beijing's main source of pollution, were reduced by 60 per cent from a year earlier because of the measures.

So far this year, levels of inhalable particulate matter – tiny dust particles that are among the worst pollutants – were reduced by 16 per cent from a year earlier, and other pollutants, such as carbon monoxide and sulphur dioxide, showed reductions of more than 20 per cent.

China's daily air pollution index, which ranges from 1 to 500, uses a standard calculation derived from levels of major pollutants. A reading below 50 is considered good, and 51 to 100 is moderate. Below 100 is considered a "blue-sky day".

Only 56 days have measured "good" so far this year, the bureau said. But environmentalists say a blue-sky day is still more polluted than what is considered healthy by the World Health Organisation.





The full article contains 320 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 01 December 2008 11:07 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Mashimaro,

China 02/12/2008 00:32:15
But the middle of the middle kingdom is air soup mu ha ha ha
2

,

02/12/2008 01:03:25
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

,

02/12/2008 01:38:34
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

Shaniqua,,

Detroit 02/12/2008 02:12:08
#3 Rob Bennett

Get a clue. What's your problem anyway? Every day you stir up hate. Sounds like an American stole your girlfriend.

5

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 02/12/2008 02:13:17
Now that the west has stopped sending rubbish to China for recycling,perhaps it has allowed them to reach the target early?
Off to Daqing again soon, the 4th largest Oilfield on the planet. A clean pleasant city of over 800,000 souls in Heilongjiang. Surrounded by thriving protected wetlands! The sooner some of you neanderthal wake up to the truth that China the "Pollution Whipping Boy",is in fact not the biggest polluter on the planet by a long way! US,India,to name but two.Oh! and before the Socialist,hanky-wringers start,what about your old mates Russia?????Hypocrites
6

,

02/12/2008 04:08:48
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
7

Shaniqua,,

Detroit 02/12/2008 04:17:53
#6

Snap! Why did you say that about me? What's your problem?
8

Guga II,

Rockall 02/12/2008 05:14:06
Is that computer generated blue sky, or the real thing?
9

Graeme,

Guangzhou 02/12/2008 05:57:39
China still has a massive problem with air pollution. At least the authorities are aware of this and like most other problems they are playing catch up with the West. Rapidly catching up.

There has been immeasurable progress within this country over the past 20 years.

Still a long way to go though.
10

Mcsnagpile,

02/12/2008 10:09:01
China seems to be always trying to clear the air nowadays.
11

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 02/12/2008 10:21:11
No doubt the beardy-sandals brigade will be hailing this as the way ahead for the world now.

Beijing clearly had a big pollution problem and they have now taken measures to considerably lessen it. Message for beardy-sandals people -> THESE MEASURES WERE TAKEN TO SOLVE A KNOWN PROBLEM. THEY SHOULD NOT BE APPLIED WHERE THE PROBLEM DOES NOT EXIST.
12

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 02/12/2008 10:33:17
China will achieve its goals of cleaning up the pollution but it will take quite a few years to reach its goals, too many people and too many coal dependent industries being the two biggest road blocks.
13

Mashimaro,

China 02/12/2008 10:40:08
The government has just released figures that severely raise the number of children known to have fallen sick with melamine poisons. Now up to hundreds of thousands ill with six deaths. How could they have got this so wrong?
14

Lost in Africa ,

02/12/2008 12:16:10
Perhaps the real solution to lowering polution in China is the continued closing of factories due to the economic collapse.
Anyway who did the counting of days?
15

Few Against Many,

02/12/2008 13:52:56
Has anybody ever been to China? IS it easy to score with Chinese chicks?
16

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 02/12/2008 15:08:41
How nice for Beijing.

As you look up at the supposedly "blue-sky" be prepared to deal with the coughing, spitting, expectorating, defecation and urination in public, pushing, shoving, constant chatter, block by block offers of illegally copied DVDs, CDs and whatever, and the feeling that you are in one of the most inhumane cities on Earth unless you are a gazillionaire and can buy luxuries unheard of in the West.

Been there twice; it was a horror show. Even the Forbidden City was Disneyland East. YUCCCH!

Never again and I do not like being served live snakes at semi-official banquets.
17

Mashimaro,

China 03/12/2008 00:43:33
#16 sorry you didn't like China but I take all of those things any day over the MacCulture you people want for the rest of the world where all things are cookie cutter US towns. Viva la difference!
18

Mashimaro,

China 03/12/2008 00:46:29
#17 oh... and live snakes at semi-official banquets? yeah... right. Cos that would mean you were expected to eat them raw... I hear the bs bells ringing. Five snake soup for winter, on the other hand...yeah... warms you up along with dog soup.
19

Finlang,

France (and China too) 03/12/2008 01:10:50
#17 & #18

Fauntleroy the Infantile #16 has posted that same over-the-top dog's breakfast several times over the past couple of years. With even more capital letters and exclamation marks. (For what?) It's really tiresome in its pointlessness.
20

,

03/12/2008 02:28:35
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
21

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 03/12/2008 09:12:08
#16 TimW1234,
At one time Tim, Beijing did have many of the problems you mentioned, but you wouldn't recognize Beijing anymore if you were to return. After all how bad could it have been if you returned for another visit? You figure if at was as bad as you claimed you would have never come back. Remember that in order to host the Olympics Beijing had to clean up and that's what it did. And yes the Forbidden City is too commercialized but no different than any other tourist attraction, anywhere in the world, and a tourist attraction it is.
22

Let's have the truth,

Queensland 03/12/2008 10:39:29
#15

"Has anybody ever been to China? IS it easy to score with Chinese chicks?"

...It's probably safer than "scoring" with a US chick insofar as you'd be less likely to score a STD.
23

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 03/12/2008 10:54:13
#22 Let's have the truth,Queensland.Lived in China for coming on seven years. Met my wife just across the Tasman from you.Most Chinese girls are extremely conservative and not at all like those in the west with yo-yo knickers!Sure there are those who are 'easy' they call them hookers!Try and be a Lothario with the average Chinese lady as you do in the west and you are likely not to repeat the experience.It would have nothing to do with disease,it would be more to do with your being minus the 'tackle' to repeat the process.There are lots of Chinese ladies in Australia sport!It is just you don't see too many lithe-ing and writhing in public.Try China town in Sydney the next time you are there.At least there the da dao (cleaver)they use on you is likely to be sharp!
24

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 03/12/2008 11:01:13
Starbuck's in the Forbidden City put me off. I must concur with Postmark-55 Have had several trips to Beijing.The last just before the Olympics (when my daughter visited us)She was very impressed with Beijing and she is not noted for being slow in coming forward and telling it as it is. The shopping district,where we stayed in next to 'Food Street'Those delicacies are there take them or leave them.It is a lucrative spot for them, selling to the gullible tourists from all over the world (and China) To our Canadian whimp, they were honouring you by offering you live snake!I see more folk here washing their paws after a visit to the facilities than I do in most places in the west!Most large stores have immaculate loos, as do the long distance trains.
25

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 03/12/2008 12:38:19
#s 17,18,19

Well, the read the same because they report the same observations and I returned because of work commitments.

Some people take too much time to go back and dig up past postings by various posters and then throw it back in their faces.

This has not happened only to me and I consider it a form of belligerent stalking and counter-productive and may even be considered "trolling" by some.

I suppose this is a past-time for some posters but just how productive and life-enhancing can it be?

Some of us posters do not want all your attention and negativistic view on life.
26

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 04/12/2008 15:36:14
Posters 17 and 18 and 19 are vicious, cretinous losers - always have been, always will be.

Get thee gone, nonentities!
27

Finlang,

France (and China too) 04/12/2008 22:39:09
I really shouldn't, but you do persistently set yourself up for an èrse-kicking.

For someone who periodically styles himself a PhD-level linguist or something similar (laughing myself sick!) your intelligence level - and maturity - is openly displayed on these pages for all to see. Your archaic, almost 19th-century use of English, is a curiosity.

Why the need to boost your poor self-worth online by upping the academic ante? Most who are well qualified in that respect have no need whatsoever to do this. (What is a "past-time" in the context above @ #25, for example?)

And there you are in all your typically insulting glory slamming posters who have apparently offended your sensibilities - not you personally, note. Your trait is to refer histrionically to such as "vicious, cretinous losers - always have been, always will be." ) Similar on threads elsewhere. So mature.

That's PhD-level linguistic tops for me! Don't expect another of your long-drawn-out school playground-level "discussions" on the subject here. Some of us have a life to lead and families to sustain.


28

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 05/12/2008 16:55:59
26 Finlang

I, too, have a life to lead, a job to attend to, and a family to support.

You are the puerile one here and have a VERY thin skin.

Be a man, buck up, and stop being such a cry-baby.
29

Dragonhead,

Dalian,China 13/12/2008 03:30:45
#28 TimW1234,Ottawa,Canada. You are the one bleating squire! "negativistic views on life" etc.
Being called "nonentities" by someone with an over-inflated opinion of themselves,is quite humorous really!
As for you uttering the words "Be a man, buck up,and stop being such a cry baby."
Still experiencing paroxysms of choking laughter at that one!

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.