Beijing authorities to spend $2.64Bln on tackling air pollution in 2017

  15 January 2017    Read: 1549
Beijing authorities to spend $2.64Bln  on tackling air pollution  in 2017
Chinese authorities plan to spend up to $2.64 billion on combating air pollution in Beijing, local media reported on Saturday.
According to state news agency Xinhua, the Beijing Financial Bureau said that the authorities intended to develop green building, decrease use of energy and reduce emissions.

The authorities hope to keep harmful PM2.5 at an annual average of around 60 micrograms per cubic meter, while in 2016 its level amounted for 73 micrograms per cubic meter. Meanwhile, a standard set by the World Health Organization (WHO) is 25 micrograms per cubic meter.

China remains the world`s largest source of carbon emissions and air pollution, with air quality in major cities far below international standards. From December 16 to 21, authorities in Beijing and 23 other cities across north and central China announced a red smog alert, the utmost warning level for air pollution in China. The Chinese authorities have taken a number of measures to tackle pollution, including removing high-emission cars from Beijing’s roads, prohibiting open-air barbecues, garbage incineration and biomass burning. According to Monday`s statement of Beijing`s acting mayor Cai Qi, some 500 enterprises polluting air will be closed and over 2,600 enterprises will be modernized in 2017, coal consumption will be cut by 30 percent and more high-polluting vehicles will be banned.

A special environmental police force was also created.

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