China's
air pollution worsens in July, highest in north
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[August 19, 2014]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Air pollution
across 74 major Chinese cities worsened in July compared to last year,
according to government data released on Tuesday, showing that the
government is having trouble shaking its smog problem.
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The 74 cities struggled with pollution on 26.9 percent of the days
in July, up from 19.5 percent a year ago, data on the Ministry of
Environmental Protection website said.
The air was worst in northern China, where Beijing, Tianjin and
seven cities in Hebei province made the list of the 10 worst cities.
Air pollution was judged high on 57.4 percent of the days in July,
up from 51.4 percent last year.
Air pollution has figured high on the government's agenda since a
choking smog dubbed the "airpocalypse" engulfed key Chinese cities
in January 2013, leading Premier Li Keqiang to announce a "war on
pollution" in March this year.
Data from Greenpeace, which monitors air quality reports from 190
cities nationwide, showed last month that PM2.5, a measurement of
tiny particles in the air, had dropped 6 percent in January-June,
compared with the same six months in 2013.
But Tuesday's government data showed that coal-reliant China is not
making much of a dent in pollution levels despite closing down
thousands of heavy-polluting facilities across the nation.
The number of high-pollution days in eastern and southern parts of
the nation was less than half those in the north, although still
growing, the data showed.
In the Yangtze River delta, Shanghai and 24 other cities faced high
pollution levels on 25.1 percent of July days, up from 14.2 percent
in the same month last year.
In nine cities in the southern Pearl River delta, pollution levels
soared on 18.1 percent of days, compared to only 6.8 percent in July
the year before.
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Officials continue to introduce new policies and legislation to deal
with the problem.
The Shanghai municipal government last month increased its maximum
penalties fivefold for companies breaching environmental
regulations.
It also removed a law saying polluters could only be fined once,
meaning the government can now impose new fines every day until
companies comply with the law.
The move was in line with China's new environmental protection law,
which aims to strengthen officials' abilities to implement
environmental policies.
(Reporting by Stian Reklev; Additional reporting by Kathy Chen;
Editing by Tom Hogue)
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