Blue skies in China’s capital spark joy, skepticism

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Image: AFP/Wang Zhao

Every day for the last five years, Zou Yi has photographed Beijing’s smog-cloaked skyline from his 13th-floor apartment, but there is something different in the air this year.

This winter, save a few grey days, the sky has been a brilliant blue, suggesting the city may finally be making progress against air pollution — an issue so dire in previous years that some periods were dubbed an “airpocalypse”.

“It feels like life has returned to the city,” Zou, a former property investor, told AFP.

Last year Beijing enjoyed the best air quality on recent record, with a steady increase in “good air” days since pollution control measures were implemented in 2013, according to the capital’s environmental protection bureau.

In the last quarter of 2017 alone, the density of dangerous particulate PM2.5 dropped by 53.8 percent year-on-year.

The average level of PM2.5 particles — which penetrate deep into the lungs — in the city last year was 58 micrograms per cubic meter. The World Health Organization recommends a maximum average exposure of 25 micrograms per cubic meter in a 24-hour period.

Analysts said this improvement was sparked by favourable weather conditions and more aggressive enforcement of environmental rules.

Questions remain, however, on whether the government’s measures are sustainable. Authorities warned that heavy smog would slam the city and surrounding areas this weekend.

From his home, Zou has an almost 360-degree view of the Central Business District — an urban landscape that he used to regard as “murky, static even.”

He has created a massive composite of nearly 2,000 photographs showing the Beijing Television tower enveloped in differing shades of grey and blue.

“Now that the air is good, I’m discovering that ours is a city of colour, full of emotion and rhythm,” the 50-year-old said.

‘I was a polluter’ 

On a recent clear, below-zero day, 65-year-old Tian Yuan and five other retirees were immersed in a lively card game at a Beijing public park.

“Give us more clean air! This is just the beginning,” Tian, who used to sell coal for a living, said between rounds.

“I was a polluter before I retired,” he said. “Now that whole company is gone.”

Even French President Emmanuel Macron marvelled at the sky during his state visit this week, saying: “I have never seen Beijing like this.”

In recent years, authorities have ordered polluting factories to leave Beijing and its surroundings, and designated “no-coal zones” where more than three million homes have abruptly switched to gas or electric heating.

Smaller businesses in the wider region are also being investigated for illegal smog-worsening practices.

Enforcement of environmental regulations was previously applied primarily to larger, state-owned enterprises, said Greenpeace East Asia climate and energy campaigner Huang Wei.

“Now the focus is on these local — and often more difficult to manage — corporations as well,” she said.

Prominent environmentalist Ma Jun said growing public awareness and pressure has played a key role in improving air quality.

Ma, who penned a major book on China’s pollution crisis, developed an online platform displaying official data on companies’ environmental violations, which people increasingly use to call out irresponsible corporations.

Long road ahead 

As China nears the end of its five-year plan for combatting smog, experts and activists called for a new strategy for long-term success.

A Greenpeace analysis released Thursday found that while PM2.5 levels in Beijing, Tianjin and 26 surrounding cities declined 33.1 percent year-on-year in the last three months of 2017, for the full year it fell just 4.5 percent around the country — the lowest rate of decline since 2013.

Strong northerly winds this winter would have improved the air quality regardless of human intervention, Huang said, though government measures have no doubt bolstered blue skies.

Xu Yuan, an air pollution policy expert at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said the recent air quality marks a “turning point.”

“We hope that people won’t be satisfied yet,” Xu said, adding that he believes pollution will “rebound,” although the long-term outlook is positive.

As for Zou, the photographer hopes to soon pass on his daily duties to other observers who will upload sky photos onto an app he is developing.

He began his project in 2013, tired of the choking smog that prevented him from leaving the house and sent his child to hospital several times, and has left his job to work on environmental issues full-time.

“I just have one dream,” he said, “that our country’s skies can always look like this.” CC 

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