First
'orange' pollution alert as smog rolls into Beijing
20
February, 2014
China's
capital Beijing, under fire to take effective measures against air
pollution, raised its four-tiered alert system to "orange"
for the first time on Friday, as heavy smog was forecast to roll into
the city over the next three days.
The
orange level, the second highest, advises schools and kindergartens
to cancel outside sports classes, but falls short of ordering school
to close and keeping government vehicles off the road, provisions
which come into force with the "red" level.
The
alert was raised after the Beijing government faced criticism from
state media and on the Internet for failing to act against high
pollution levels last weekend.
State
news agency Xinhua said that the city had dispatched inspectors to
factories around the capital, warning that those found breaching
emission rules would be fined.
The
capital was already shrouded in smoky, white smog by Friday
afternoon. Data from the U.S. embassy put levels of PM2.5 particles,
those measuring less than 2.5 micrometers across and the most noxious
form of air pollution, at 378.
The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers levels above 300 to be
hazardous. Last weekend, the index topped 500.
Forecasters
said the smog would persist for three days and authorities urged
residents to leave cars at home.
Some
residents welcomed the announcement. Others asked why more was not
being done.
"Excuse
me, but do the PM2.5 measurements have to explode off the charts
before we see a red alert?" said a user of weibo, China's
twitter-like microblogging service.
The
stability-obsessed government is keen to be seen as tough on
pollution as affluent city dwellers grow weary of a
growth-at-all-costs economic model that has tainted much of China's
air, water and soil.
Authorities
have issued innumerable orders and policies to try and clean up the
environment, investing in projects to fight pollution and empowering
courts to mete out stiff penalties, including the death penalty in
serious cases.
But
enforcement has been patchy at the local level, where authorities
often rely on taxes paid by polluting industries.
The
Beijing government introduced the tiered system last October. But
despite several periods of thick smog since then, the plan's stronger
measures have never before been introduced.
Public
discontent about Beijing's dirty air was highlighted on Friday when a
Chinese military expert became the object of scorn online after
suggesting smog in the city could be a useful defense against a U.S.
military laser attack.
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