This week’s big environmental story, December 8-14
On 30 November, China published its third air pollution control
plan, aiming to further cut airborne pollutants and to transition
toward clean industry.
The plan emphasises reducing emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile
organic compounds (VOCs), setting emission caps for both pollutants. The plan
mentions methods including using fewer materials containing high VOCs in
products such as paint and detergent, and upgarding boilers that emit high NOx.
Specific targets include: by 2025, cities at the prefecture level and above
should reduce their fine particulate matter pollution (PM2.5) levels by 10%
compared to 2020, and heavily polluted days should account for less than 1% of
the year. (Levels may have fallen a little bit lower in 2020 than the
prevailing trend due to reduced industrial output caused by the pandemic.)
Moreover, the PM2.5 levels of Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region should decrease by 20%,
and by 2025 the Fenwei Plain area should be 15% lower, again compared to 2020.
Beijing’s PM2.5 level should be controlled below 32 micrograms per cubic metre
by 2025. This is a little lower than the national standard, but remains much
higher than the World Health Organisation (WHO) guideline.
China’s first national air pollution
control plan was released in 2013. It was succeeded in 2018 by
another on “defending the blue sky”, which put more cities under air quality
management targets.
Between 2013 and 2021, China’s air pollution levels fell 42.3%, according to
this year’s Air Quality Life Index from
the University of Chicago’s Energy Policy Institute.
Despite significant improvements over the last decade, at the end of 2022
nearly a third of China’s cities fell short of the national air quality
standard. This year’s situation has worsened due to
economic activity rebounding, climate change, and other factors.
“The turning point for air quality, shifting from quantitative to qualitative
change, has not yet arrived. Heavy pollution is still frequent. As we all know,
the three major structures have not been fundamentally improved: the industrial
structure focuses on heavy and chemical industry, the energy structure relies
heavily on coal, and the transportation structure prioritises roads,” said Liu
Bingjiang, director of the department of atmospheric environment at the
Ministry of Ecology and Environment, during a press conference on
the new plan on 11 December.
Given these circumstances, the newly released plan outlines nine major tasks to
be achieved by 2025, such as eliminating outdated steel production capacity,
promoting a transition to green industry, boosting renewable energy
installation, and developing green transportation.
“[The plan] clearly defines the foundation of collaborative governance for
pollution and carbon reduction,” Dr Wan Wei, China program director of Clean
Air Asia, told The Paper.
(Sources: China Dialogue)
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