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Beijing hopes new clean-up plan won't go up in smoke

The latest attempt to curb pollution is sensible but enforcing the rules is the key challenge

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Steam rises from Tianjin's Junliangcheng station. The mainland hopes to curb pollution by cutting coal use. Photo: Blooomberg
Reuters

The mainland's new plans to cut coal use and tackle pollution have a sense of deja vu about them, being the latest in a series of measures aimed at improving air quality in the world's second-largest economy.

But the key question, as always with environmental moves on the mainland, is will they be enforced this time or whether once again regulation will be soft and easily side-stepped by regional governments, or polluting companies.

On the face of it, the measures announced last week seem sensible and achievable, with the key aim to reduce consumption of fossil fuels, mainly coal, to below 65 per cent of total primary energy use by 2017.

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This is a relatively modest decline from the 66.8 per cent share fossil fuels held last year, but again the devil is in the detail.

The plans include cutting coal use, mainly by closing polluting steel mills, factories and smelters, with a target being Hebei, the largest steel-producing region.

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This can be seen as a follow-up to July's moves to restrain capacity in bloated sectors such as steel and aluminium by setting stricter limits on power consumption and emissions.

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