Video:
Living with Beijing’s ‘air-pocalypse’ – ‘I haven’t seen
the sun in four days’
Beijing,
China (CNN) – "Let the sunshine, let the sunshine in …"
my wife Ana blurted into a song this week, as she gazed eastwards
through the window of our apartment in downtown Beijing.
20 January, 2013
The
old tune from the Broadway show Hair seemed apt. This is the fourth
consecutive morning that we woke up staring at a grey haze.
It's
another bad-air day in Beijing. You can barely see. You can barely
breathe. But you can feel -- and even taste -- the grit floating in
the air.
The
World Health Organization has set healthy level of Air Quality Index
at 25 micrograms, while Beijing considers a 300 reading as "Bad"
and 500 as "Hazardous." Last weekend, however, it breached
700!
"I'm
getting itchy," complained my daughter Michelle, 22, visiting us
from New York. "I could feel it at the back of my throat."
Longtime
expatriate residents in the Chinese capital jokingly call it the
"Beijing tickle," a nagging cough that takes a long time to
shrug off.
Air
pollution is a major problem in China because of the country's rapid
pace of industrialization, reliance on coal power, explosive growth
in car ownership and the sometimes disregard for environmental laws.
It
is now paying the price of rapid development.
In
2007, China overtook the United States as the world's biggest emitter
of greenhouse gases, according to China's Ministry of Commerce. It is
also the No. 1 source of carbon emission worldwide, state-run China
Daily reported recently. […]
Almost
400,000 premature deaths are recorded in China each year, with the
majority related to pollution, according to the World Bank's Cost of
Pollution in China, a report based on official Chinese figures.
[more]
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