REUTERS - Environmental
authorities in China have advised 23 northern cities to issue red alerts, the
highest possible air pollution warning, on Friday evening, against
the
"worst" smog the country has experienced since autumn, state media
said.
China issued
its first ever red alert for smog in Beijing, the capital, last December, after
adopting a color-graded warning system in a crackdown on environmental
degradation left by decades of breakneck economic growth.
Officials in
Beijing issued a red alert on Thursday after the Ministry of Environmental
Protection (MEP) warned of a smog build-up across China's north, saying the
alert was expected to run until Dec. 21.
The ministry
has also advised 22 more cities reeling under pollution to issue the red alert
warning, the official China Daily said on Friday.
Nine cities,
including Jinan in the province of Shangdong were advised to issue the
lower-status orange alert, Liu Bingjing, the ministry's head of air quality
management, told the paper.
The
notification will be the third joint warning by city governments this month,
Liu added.
Regular
episodes of smog blanketing northern China this year stem from a combination of
local emissions, unfavorable weather and pollutants wafted in from elsewhere,
Bai Qiuyong, head of China's Environmental Monitoring Center, told the paper.
Environmental
authorities in Hebei province, which borders capital city Beijing, asked for a
level one emergency response from major cities in the region to begin from
Friday, according to a post on its official microblog account on China's
Twitter-like Weibo service late on Thursday.
The order
requires the large number of heavy polluting industries in these cities,
including Tangshan, China's steel capital, to cut back or halt production until
Wednesday.
Environmental
group Greenpeace urged the government in a statement on Friday to
"strictly punish" factories and plants in Hebei that flout
regulations, as it said they have often done during past alerts.
Red alerts are
issued in Beijing when the air quality index, a measure of pollutants, is
forecast to break 200 for more than four days in succession, surpass 300 for
more than two days or overshoot 500 for at least 24 hours.
At each level,
the colour-graded warning system prescribes advisories for schools, hospitals
and businesses, as well as possible curbs on traffic and construction.
Thresholds for
the issue of alerts vary among cities, as do the cautionary measures urged on
local residents and businesses at each stage.
Residents of
smaller cities near Beijing have previously complained that local government
bodies failed to issue warnings when pollution was just as severe as in the
capital.
REUTERS
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