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The new Chinese standards require concentrations of fine particulate matter called PM2.5 to be kept below daily averages of 75 micrograms per cubic meter
-- more than twice as lenient as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's standard of 35 micrograms. Some Chinese cities generally have much higher amounts than that, and the U.S. Embassy monitoring showed a 24-hour average in the capital Friday of 188.5, a reading that it called "very unhealthy." PM2.5 -- particles less than 2.5 micrometers in size, or about 1/30th the width of an average human hair
-- are believed to be a health risk because they can lodge deeply in the lungs, and have been linked to increased cardiovascular and respiratory diseases as well as lung cancer.
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