China to cut emissions, boost public transport to combat lingering smog
Plan would cut sulphur dioxide, cap industrial emissions and promote cleaner fuels
China plans cuts in major sources of air pollution including sulphur dioxide and will promote more public transport in large cities, the government said late on Thursday, as the country’s north grapples with a lingering smog crisis.
The world’s second-largest economy will cut sulphur dioxide, a key contributor to air pollution produced by power plants and industry, by 15 per cent by 2020, China’s State Council, the country’s cabinet, said in a five-year plan paper.
As well as capping industrial emissions, China would raise the share of public transport to 30 per cent of total traffic in major cities by 2020 and promote cleaner, more efficient fuels, the new plan said.
China is in the third year of a “war on pollution” to tackle the legacy of more than three decades of untrammelled economic growth, but it has struggled to meet air quality standards or to prevent occurrences of hazardous smog like the current episode.
An environment ministry spokesman said on Thursday that excessive resource use was “a bottleneck holding back China’s economic and social development”, and the situation remained grave.
Smog has lingered over large parts of northern China for most of the last two weeks, caused by increased coal use for winter heating as well as “unfavourable weather conditions,” even though overall concentrations of small, unhealthy airborne particles known as PM2.5 fell 6 per cent during 2016, according to environment ministry data.