The world has reached an epoch in conscious environmental
thinking. With so much action and awareness going on around the world like the
Climate Summit in Paris, there is at last a light in the distance. This week an article popped up that seems to
recur every couple of months or so in the popular science and news websites,
about one particular environmental issue:
The smog that envelops Beijing.
Outside the Forbidden City, Beijing. Photo taken by author during trip to Beijing, 2014 |
A couple of years ago I spent a week in Beijing visiting all
the regular tourist spots including the Great Wall of China. Prior to my departure the news reports were
showing images of Beijing cloaked in a dirty grey haze that blocked out the sun
and choked people as they went around their everyday lives. I was nervous heading over. Did I need a face mask? Was this environment dangerous to my health? And would I need to watch the sunrise on the
big screen in Tiananmen Square?
I was pleasantly surprised on my drive from the airport to
my hotel that it was light, sunny, and more a shade of white than grey. Nowhere near the extreme images I had seen on
the news, and I only saw two people with face masks on during my whole
visit. But there was a distinct haze,
high up, shielding the blue sky. Though it
was sunny, you couldn’t see the sun, and it felt like you were in a giant dome
of some sort. Perhaps I was lucky that
week to get a lower level of smog than the city endures on other days, but even
still, to never see blue sky wasn’t quite right.
The Great Wall of China. Photo taken by author during trip to Beijing, 2014 |
Smog is a dangerous side-effect of our industrialised world.
A mixture of particulates, nitrogen oxides,
sulphur oxides, ozone and water vapour (Conserve Energy Future, n.d.), smog is caused
by emissions from cars, factories, and fires.
It has the potential to cause and inflame a number of respiratory
ailments, it can cause eye, nose and throat irritation, and sometimes it can
lead to death in the elderly and infirmed (Conserve Energy Future, n.d).
According to an article on theguardian.com
this week, Beijing had its second “red-alert” this month, with pollution levels
recently reaching nearly 15 times the World Health Organisations safe limits
(Phillips, 2015). When the smog reaches
the highest levels the city is basically shut down; people are told to stay
indoors and businesses, factories and schools are closed. But the government in China is putting in
place a lot of initiatives to curb the rising pollution problems, including strong
restrictions on vehicle use, banning of outdoor barbeques and fireworks when
pollution is at its peak (Reuters, 2015), and clamping down on factories with
fines for over-polluting (Phillips, 2015). It recognises that, in this instance,
the people’s health is more important than the economy, and they are doing what’s
necessary to protect that. Not an easy
task in a city with a population of 23 million (Phillips, 2015), but let’s hope
that one day the Great Wall of China will forever have blue skies above.
REFERENCES:
Conserve Energy Future. (n.d.). How smog is formed? Retrieved
from http://www.conserve-energy-future.com/SmogPollution.php
Phillips, T. (2015). Beijing’s
‘airpocalypse’: city shuts down amid three-day smog red alert. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/08/beijing-smog-city-shuts-down-amid-red-alert
Reuters. (2015). Beijing
grinds to halt as second ever ‘red alert’ issued over severe smog. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/18/beijing-pollution-second-ever-red-alert-smog-china
3 comments:
I hope we never have to experience the thick grey smog you describe here in NZ. Although your photograph of the Great Wall enshrouded in white smog does remind me of many a hilltop view of my surroundings on winter mornings right here in Auckland...speaking of which, the air pollution levels in this city are very much comparable to that of other major metropolitan centres around the globe. I was about to spew some drivel about Auckland having the worst air pollution in NZ, but to my surprise, it turns out Timaru has significantly higher levels of air pollution than we do (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11251714). That's something to be grateful for, I suppose.
Makes me feel so lucky to live in New Zealand. The rest of the world sort of exports pollution by having China manufacturing so much for us
My Father calls Auckland smog city, but I think after read this we are indeed lucky. Although I seen smog in Auckland, it gave the evening sky a horrible yellow smokers glow.
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