Beijing needs drastic change to tackle smog

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BEIJING: China has cleaned up its air before, but experts say that if it wants to avoid the kind of smog that choked the country this week it must overhaul an economy fuelled by heavily polluting coal and car use.


Several days of hazardous air quality across large swathes of northern China triggered an emergency response, which saw schoolchildren kept indoors, factories closed and government cars parked.

Experts are urging authorities to take firmer action to confront the consequences of China’s rapid industrialization—and the spending habits of the middle classes created by its economic boom.

The calls for cleaner air come after new Communist Party leader Xi Jinping said the government would strive to meet demands for “more comfortable living conditions, and a more beautiful environment.”

China began releasing pollution data last year, a move which observers say triggered a huge backlash against the smog—both from a newly aware public who took to Internet message boards in droves, and from normally partisan state media.

As the noxious haze blanketed Beijing this week, driving sales of face masks and air purifiers through the roof, state news agency Xinhua said the party’s promise to build a beautiful China was “in jeopardy.”

When the eyes of the world were on Beijing for the 2008 Olympics, the city implemented strict measures for two months, or more that reduced toxic emissions by 60 percent. Car users could only drive every other day, construction work ceased and factories were shut down.

Such steps were “extreme resolutions which are not sustainable,” said professor John Cai, director of the Center for Healthcare Management and Policy at the China Europe International Business School in Shanghai.

“What needs to happen is for the government to take long-term action by centralizing the heating systems, so that individual families in rural areas do not burn coal, and also cutting down on car use in the city,” he said.

China would face “short-term economic losses” from sweeping changes, Cai said, but the government should look to the long term.

Growing car use has been both an important driver of the economy and an overt symbol of China’s mounting wealth.

But with five million vehicles already in Beijing and 20,000 more each month, Cai said addressing it was essential, suggesting owners be forced to pay high license fees on each vehicle to reduce emissions.

Tackling coal use is even more problematic. While families might be encouraged onto a central heating system, 79 percent of China’s electricity is generated by the fuel, according to the World Coal Association.

Much of that is the low-grade “dirty” kind rather than the “clean” coal now favored in many Western markets.

Beijing said that in May that it would get rid of 1,200 high-polluting enterprises by 2015. It has set up bicycle rental kiosks to try to ease congestion. But implementing strict lasting controls requires firm political will from China’s new leaders, Cai said.

Given Xi’s professed stand in favor of an environmental clean-up, he anticipated “substantial, radical changes” within two years.

Premier-to-be Li Keqiang said tackling the issue required greater enforcement of environmental protections as well as increased public awareness. Many ordinary people, however, did not seem optimistic.