China bans polluting projects in three cities

BEIJING--China has ordered three northern cities to stop approving new projects that would add to air pollution after they failed to meet air quality targets this past winter.
The mayors of Handan in Hebei province and Jincheng and Yangquan in Shanxi province were given the orders after being summoned to a meeting at the Ministry of Ecology and Environment in Beijing on Thursday to account for their actions during a recent campaign against smog.
The meeting came after the cities failed to meet targets to cut levels of hazardous, breathable particles known as PM2.5 over the October 2017 to March 2018 period. Reuters was the first foreign media organisation allowed to attend such a meeting, the ministry said.
"We will continue to fight against air pollution in the name of dignity and as our mission," said Handan's mayor, Wang Litong, who sat with the other mayors facing a line of eight environmental officials in a crowded meeting hall at the ministry.
China launched a campaign last October to reduce average concentrations of PM2.5 by between 10-25 percent in 28 northern cities in an effort hit 2013-2017 air quality targets. However, though Handan was ordered to reduce traffic, cut industrial output and curb coal use in a bid to cut PM2.5 by 20 percent over the period, it only achieved an average reduction of 15.7 percent.
Handan, a major steel- and chemical-producing city, also saw average PM2.5 concentrations increase 4.9 percent to 86 micrograms per cubic metre in 2017, with one district experiencing a 19.7 percent rise.
Wang, the Handan mayor, said in a prepared speech that the city would make big sacrifices to tackle pollution. "We will cut off our own hands to wage the last-ditch battle," he said.
He said the city planned to close another 300,000 tonnes of steelmaking capacity, 1.1 million tonnes of coal-producing capacity and 268 megawatts of coal-fired power by August. He said three officials have been fired and 14 given warnings.
The three cities have been ordered to come up with a detailed plan to "rectify" the situation, which they must submit to the environment ministry within 20 days, said Liu Changgen, a ministry official.
The major of Jincheng, Liu Feng, said the major coal and gas city would "rather sacrifice GDP growth" in order to curb air pollution, noting that Jincheng's gross domestic product fell 9 percent as a result of production curbs in the first quarter, while fixed-asset investment slumped 41 percent.

The Daily Herald

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