Skip to Content
  • Thu Mar 18 2010
  • Welcome Guest!

Live Users (last hour): 965
Registered Users: 87,227

2007 Dec 27 Holy Smoke, Beijing!

pollution

Break out the masks, folks!

According to the State Environmental Protection Administration, the brown haze that descended on our fair city hit a whopping 421 on the Air Pollution Index today. To put that in perspective, on a good day it hovers between 50-150. On a bad day, we're looking at 200 or so.

In fact, today's smog is so bad that the American Environmental Protection Agency rates it as Condition Maroon - or Hazardous. They even go so far as to advise "AQI values over 300 trigger health warnings of emergency conditions. The entire population is more likely to be affected." Doctors recommend not undertaking physical exercise outside, and limiting exposure to the pollution.

Not a day to be leaving the house, if you can avoid it. And if you do, make sure you mask up!

Links and Sources
Image: Drum Tower with the hills to the west of Beijing in the background (tbj photographer Simon Lim)
State Environmental Protection Administration: Air Quality Daily Report for 84 Major Cities In China

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

Russell Beighton.

I find it amazing that it takes an outsider, such as he amarican enviromental agency to pass a sever warning to the people of Beijing, were are the severe warnings on local tv and radio, is this taken as a light hearted matter here.
People should have been given the right to take time away from work or there daily schedeule to stay in doors and not face the killer fog, without getting punished from there place of work.
How bad does it have to get before it is taken seriously, if out side sources are concerned why is this concern not being shown from the goverment here.
As my dear wife often says to me living here is like living on the moon.
By this she means,nothing is spoken about its all hush hush.
I think its time the silence was broken and people of this city were warned to the dangers that surrounds them.
The future of this developing city may seem very colourful and full of optimism, but nature will not stand for constant poisoning that it is being subjected to, its just a matter of time.
One more point before i depart,todays reports are not a good advertisment to the world in terms of visitng this city,and im sure this day will be kept in the minds of people around the world when it comes to olympics time.
Will they want to leave the clean air of there home land's to sit and watch someone running around a track," possibly with a mask on" i dont think so.
So all i can say is GOOD LUCK WITH THE OLYMPICS YOU WILL NEED IT.
Ps. my wife as also just been told the infection in her throat and the lumps on her tongue, which she has been suffering from for one week has been caused by the past days of smog,BRILLIANT.

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

yoda

I too have had problems with an infection and being hoarse-both of which my doctor attributed to the lovely air pollution in this city. It doesn't encourage me to want to put down roots here.

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

Kyle

Honestly I don't think Beijingers generally give much attention to the air they're breathing. Ask anyone and they'll complain about housing prices and traffic. It's like the filthy stairs and elevators that no one bothers to clean, it's a collective retardation in the society. There's a part of me that secretly wishes a day like this would happen during the Olympics - sorry Beijing gov't but would losing face be the only way to recoup part of my lungs?

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

Random Canadian

My roommates and I are all thinking of leaving Beijing because of the air. We've never experienced so much sickness in our lives.. waking up with sore throats every day, coughing up phlem, and blowing your nose and finding soot and blood in the kleenex, is not exactly fun. I quit smoking last year and I feel exactly like I've started up again.

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

Beijing Student

Yea, I'm getting real worried about my health. I've never had allergies in my life, and I've got a sinus infection so bad that two doctors recommend operation.

Even more troubling, I had the first nose-bleed of my entire life on the 27th. This can't be good, not one little bit.

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

Random North American

They should try to do something. Between the air and the traffic, they should be happy if anyone is here during the Olympics.I hope the wind kicks up soon again. I have been coughing for days now.Some people tried to tell me it was *fog*.

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

now or never

my son has been in beijing for almost a year and i have never worried so much about his health before. Always telling me how sick he was and never the proper medical care available or doctors who seem to know anything so the only thing you can put it down to is the poison in the air of beijing
Westerners get out while you can and let them rot if they don't have the common sense to give a sh*t about life, themselves or their country

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

smoggybeijing

Does anyone know that the air pollution index last Thursday was 421, yet even worse is that one the following day, the air pollution index went straight up to 500 on a scale of 500!! (Source: New York Times Dec.29th, 2007)Holy smokes! Both days are far exceed the pollution level that deemed to be safe by the WHO, if anyone knows what it means. Seriously, I am curious to know what the government says about it, so do the Chinese people.

I was one of the victims of that day's smog. Beiing out in the late afternoon for 1 hour and the next morning upon awake I had this sore throat and fever. Three days passed and I am still not getting over from it. Damned pollution.

A green Olympics? Is it daydreaming or what?

Re: Holy Smoke, Beijing!

2 years in beijing

What is said here is all true. Maybe many of you have lived here for years and know what the city has faced for pollution. The shock of coming to the city for the first time is great. That will really leave a bad impression on foreigners.

There was, though, an article published in That's Beijing in the last year of an American scientist that studied health effects of living in such conditions. For the 3-5 year resident living in Beijing, the effects of pollution on long term health were very small. For long term residents and older people it was more serious.

These are no excuses for not cleaning up the air, but how different is this level of pollution from the pollution of early 20th century industrial America or England? And how much of America's cheap 'made in China products' are the cause of this pollution?

And how many of the IOC really believed such an industrial country could alter the course of it's entire climate system to accomodate 2 weeks of fresh air? I really don't see it happening. . .

You might also be interested in :

  • Get Ready for Grit

    Spring is right around the corner, and with that comes the annual spring sandstorm season. For newbies to Beijing, this means a few months of dust and dirt blowing through town like a vacuum cleaner on reverse, and when it gets bad, conditions can be downright apocalyptic.

    2008 is looking especially grim, according to the Beijing Meteorological Station, which is predicting as many as 11 days of dust storms this year due to a warm winter and less rainfall in the desert areas surrounding the capital.

    Xinhua reports that recent years have seen an average of 9.7 days of dust storms, though last year saw only three blow through town. But because 2007 saw 11 percent less precipitation than the average levels of previous years, spring is indeed looking like gritty.

    Better dust off those facemasks now.

  • Rain Makers

    The rain that finally broke Beijing's 110-day dry spell fell harder and longer than it would have, thanks to the local government adopting cloud-seeding and other artificial precipitation measures. Given the favorable conditions (the meteorological bureau was predicting light rain) the local government decided to launch a land and air offensive on Feb 12 to try increase the amount of rain that would fall over Beijing. According to a report placed on the meteorological bureau's website, one plane from the Chinese air force was called into offer air support to 7 ground teams who blasted 49 rockets into the low lying clouds and another 31 teams who were busy burning 875 sticks of Silver iodide atop various mountains around suburban and rural Beijing.

  • Pic of the Week: 10:05 from my window

    Image courtesy of coeurdelion

    The above image was taken this morning from Landmark Towers on the North East corner of the Third Ring Road. In another sign of how grim things are, the Firefox plug-in that flashes weather updates on our desktop currently reads blowing dust.


    Links and Sources:

    The Beijinger Forum: Smog...fog...haze...what is it?
    Beijing Landmark Towers

  • No New Slopes

    With slopes mushrooming up around the city these past few years, skiing has become the bai ling winter sport of choice – a trend that heretofore had developers gleefully plotting plans and land for bigger, better and even newer resorts.

    But according to skirebel.com this will all soon grind to a halt: the National Reform and Development Committee and the Beijing Municipal Bureau of State and Land Resources have jointly decided to put a stop to further ski area development within municipal boundaries, which may complicate things for developers like Melco International, a Hong Kong listed company controlled by the son of Macau gambling magnate Stanley Ho that has plans to acquire the Lianhuashan ski resort in Beijing’s Shunyi District.

  • Blue Skies

    As the sky looms gray and depressing over Beijing and even the shortest bike rides result in sore throats and suspicious coughs, rest assured that there’s a reason for it all: those peasants are at it again! The Beijing Environmental Protection Agency issued a statement last week that seasonal straw burning in rural areas was in part responsible for the visible recent increase in pollution in the capital. Burning excess straw, a low-cost alternative to tilling it into the soil, is done in preparation for a second planting. Although burning straw was prohibited in Beijing in 2000, the practice continues in neighboring provinces, and occurs annually at this time of year.

Copyright 2009 True Run Media. All Rights Reserved. 京ICP备05080207
Powered by CANDIS Infrastructure Services