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City urged to promptly sound smog alerts

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2016-01-08 08:47China Daily Editor: Feng Shuang
Visitors play on an ice rink in Shichahai, Beijing, on Monday, when the city enjoyed blue skies and good air. (Photo: China Daily/Guo Qiao)

Visitors play on an ice rink in Shichahai, Beijing, on Monday, when the city enjoyed blue skies and good air. (Photo: China Daily/Guo Qiao)

The national environmental watchdog told the Beijing municipal government on Thursday that it could do better the next time it declared a smog alert.

The first alarm could have been sounded earlier, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said in its review of Beijing's two red alerts for smog in December.

If it had been issued more quickly, it would have better helped residents, the ministry said.

Since November, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region has been engulfed three times by severe smog covering expanses of up to 630,000 square kilometers.

The capital saw the daily average concentration of PM2.5-particles less than 2.5 microns in diameter that are hazardous to health-soar quickly from Nov 15 to Dec 31, reaching a level 75.9 percent higher than the same period of 2015, the ministry said on Thursday.

In response, Beijing issued two red alerts, the highest in the four-level smog alert system. Industrial production was suspended, vehicle use was limited and public schools were closed.

Many residents complained about the red alerts, especially about the school closures-parents worried about their children at home alone while they themselves had to work.

"This was not an effective way to control air pollution, particularly as many people didn't notice the red alert the second time," said Zhang Yiqun, 30, who added that even though he worked for a Chinese media company in Beijing, he received no advance notice of the second red alert, which was in effect from Dec 19 to 22.

Unlike the first red alert-from Dec 8 to 10-over 110,000 vehicles violated the alternating odd-even license plate restrictions during the second alert, the municipal environmental watchdog said.

"I know that the authorities said the air pollution peak was reduced, but I didn't feel the difference. Maybe the improvement wasn't large enough," Zhang said.

Zhang Yanchen, 28, who works at a research institution in the capital, also thought the red alerts had not been effectively controlled and added that the government had to more strictly regulate industrial production and the burning of coal.

On Thursday, the ministry pointed out that from Nov 26 to Dec 1, when Beijing had its heaviest smog of 2015, the capital issued only an orange alert, the second-highest level, bringing measures into effect that were not stringent enough to effectively control the pollution. In addition, though the capital issued the two subsequent red alerts, the first of these did not work well because of the short notice before it took effect, the ministry said.

  

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