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Beijing to exit 200 most polluted cities list

By AFP
12 September 2019   |   10:32 am
Beijing's notoriously bad air quality has improved in recent years and the Chinese capital is expected to drop out of a list of 200 most polluted cities in the world this year, a data provider said Thursday.

(COMBO) This combination of file photos created on October 15, 2018 shows a general view of the central business district in Beijing on September 5, 2018 (top) and on a polluted day on October 15, 2018. – Beijing’s notoriously bad air quality has improved in recent years and the Chinese capital is expected to drop out of a list of 200 most polluted cities in the world this year, a data provider said on September 12, 2019. (Photo by NICOLAS ASFOURI / AFP)

Beijing’s notoriously bad air quality has improved in recent years and the Chinese capital is expected to drop out of a list of 200 most polluted cities in the world this year, a data provider said Thursday.

Beijing “is on track” to reduce PM2.5 — tiny particles that are the deadliest air pollutants — by nearly 20 percent this year compared to 2018, Swiss air purification technology company IQAir’s research arm AirVisual said.

The average hourly PM2.5 readings in the smog-choked Chinese capital fell to 42.6 micrograms per cubic metre of air in the first eight months of 2019, down from 52.8 for the same period last year.

“Compared to a decade earlier, the difference is even more striking,” the report said. “The PM2.5 concentration in the first eight months of 2019 was less than half that of the same period in 2009.”

The annual average PM2.5 concentration reached an eye-watering 104.0 in 2010. It began a steady decline in 2013.

But the current levels are still four times higher than those recommended by the World Health Organization.

The tiny particulate matter can lodge deep in the lungs and cause respiratory ailments, lung cancer and cardiovascular diseases.

Beijing was ranked 122 among the most polluted cities in the world in 2018, according to a March report by environmental group Greenpeace and AirVisual’s data.

The improvements in air quality were driven by the city’s strict push to trim coal consumption and shut down or relocate polluting plants, the Beijing municipal government said in a February statement.

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