China expands switch from polluting coal
heating in 2018 -environment minister
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[March 11, 2019]
BEIJING (Reuters) - China expanded
its coal-to-gas and coal-to-electricity projects to 35 cities in 2018
from 12 cities the previous year, China's environment minister, Li
Ganjie, said on Monday, as the world's second-largest economy stepped up
its fight against smog.
China's winter heating program used to burn an estimated 400 million
tonnes of coal a year, and switching it to cleaner types of fuel was
identified as a major part of the country's war on pollution, now in its
sixth year.
The program to convert households to low-emission heating ran into
difficulties last winter amid widespread natural gas shortages, but 4.8
million households still managed to make the switch from coal to natural
gas and electricity last year, up from 4 million households switched in
2017, Li said.
China has also installed ultra-low emissions technology at more than 80
percent of its total coal-fired power generation capacity, Li added.
But, speaking to journalists at a press conference on the sidelines of
China's annual parliamentary meeting, Li warned that despite the strides
made in 2018, China's war on smog was getting harder.
"In reality the pressures are huge and it isn't easy to be optimistic
about the trends," he said. "The things that could easily be done have
already mostly been done, and the things that need to be done afterwards
are much harder."
While China cut the share of coal in its total energy mix to 59 percent
last year, down from 68.5 percent in 2012, it remained too high, he
said. There were also still regional disparities in the way
environmental protection was being enforced, he said.
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Chinese Minister of Ecology and Environment Li Ganjie speaks at a
news conference on the sidelines of the National People's Congress
(NPC) in Beijing, China March 11, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer
China said last week that it would implement special emissions
restrictions for a third consecutive winter, after Premier Li
Keqiang told parliament that the state would continue to strengthen
pollution controls in 2019.
China's economy expanded at its slowest rate since 1990 last year,
and the environment ministry has been at pains to state that it
would not relent in its efforts to curb pollution.
However, though concentrations of hazardous small particles known as
PM2.5 fell overall last year, they rebounded over winter, with
averages in 39 smog-prone northern cities up 13 percent over the
October-February period.
(Reporting by Meng Meng in Beijing; Writing by Chen Aizhu in
Singapore and David Stanway in Shanghai; Editing by Tom Hogue and
Christian Schmollinger)
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