Smog in ChinaStudent

Smog in China

BEIJING — Emergency measures came __________ in Harbin, the northeastern city blanketed with hazardous smog this week: Schools were shut down, buses ordered off the roads, the airport closed, police roadblocks set up to check __________ emissions from cars. City officials even _____________ in the surrounding countryside, ordering farmers to stop burning the cornstalks left in their fields after the harvest.

They were reacting to the first notable surge of air pollution in China this autumn. Residents across the nation’s north fear that the smog is a sign of things to come. With winter approaching, cities north of the Huai River are turning on their coal-fired municipal heating systems, whose emissions were found in one study to shorten residents’ life spans by an average of five years.

In Harbin, moist air trapped the pollution at ground level, leaving people to walk through a gray __________ wearing face masks. Visibility was so bad that two buses got lost plying their routes.

But the emergency measures showed that the government was trying to address the problem rather than merely cover it up, as it might have done in past years, some environmental activists said.

Action plans in Harbin, Beijing and other cities, along with broad national policies meant to ________ air pollution announced last month, signal that some officials are serious about tackling the chronic problem. On Thursday, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said it was sending inspection teams to cities across China for the winter to ensure that environmental regulations were enforced.

Awareness of various kinds of pollution — air, water and soil — has risen quickly this year, especially among middle-class ________. Chinese news media, including official state outlets, are reporting more aggressively on the causes and effects of pollution. An editorial in Beijing News on Wednesday took note that last week the World Health Organization had classified air pollution as a leading cause of cancer, and said that on days when the air is hazardous, “containing the pollution and protecting the health of residents is the highest priority.”

But the advocates say enforcement is often a weak point, even when leaders understand that cleaning up the environment has become critical to maintaining social and political stability.

“I give credit to the local government for taking these measures,” Ma Jun, an environmental advocate, said of the emergency actions in Harbin. “Of course, they will have some problem with their image, the city’s image — but on the other hand, it shows they put people’s health ahead of saving face.

“Having said that, I think it’s not enough,” he added. “I think people won’t be satisfied with just knowing which day to put on face masks or not go to school or keep their children indoors. They really want blue-sky days.”

Under pressure from the public, Beijing in 2012 became the first Chinese city to announce levels of an especially __________ category of particulate matter, known as PM 2.5, in the air. Since then, 113 other cities _________________ . The data can be seen online in real time, which was how much of China followed the crisis in Harbin.

On Monday and Tuesday, air-quality monitoring stations in some parts of the city reported PM 2.5 concentrations that exceeded 1,000 micrograms per cubic meter — 40 times the level deemed safe by the W.H.O.

Since 2007, the Ministry of Environmental Protection has published an annual list of high-polluting industrial plants around China. The latest identifies 4,189 factories that, together, release 65 percent of China’s total industrial air pollutants. “We need to know where they are, what kinds of pollutants they__________ , the volume and whether they are in compliance with discharge standards,” Mr. Ma said, adding that local governments gather that data but do not release it.

Advocates hope that identifying the polluters publicly will help to shame them into improving, Mr. Ma said, with pressure coming from “whoever invests in the polluting factories, the banks giving them loans, the brands that source from these polluters.”

The central government is apparently ______________ pressure as well. One goal of the national plan announced last month was to reduce the concentration of PM 2.5 in three heavily populated industrial regions by 15 percent to 25 percent, compared with 2012 levels. Prime Minister Li Keqiang said last month that the cities of Beijing and Tianjin and the province of Hebei, all in northern China, would cut down their use of coal, the main source of air pollution, by 80 million tons a year in the near future.

Still, environmentalists worry that growth-minded local officials and businesses will be reluctant to go along. “Chinese leaders have produced an impressive flurry of policies on air pollution this year, but ___________ still suffer from insufficient authority; rapid economic growth means that a steady stream of pollution sources come on line every day; and vested business interests are sure to _______________ every step of the way,” Alex L. Wang, a scholar of Chinese environmental policy and a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, said in an e-mail.

“It’s one thing to have a strategy, and another to execute it well,” he added.

Huang Wei, who works on climate and energy issues at Greenpeace East Asia, said officials needed to focus on bigger solutions, not ____________ measures. “The situation will not change as long as China has an over 70 percent energy dependency on coal,” she said. “The long-term solution is to get rid of heavy energy-consuming industries.”

Until that happens, Chinese citizens are bracing for many more days of heavy pollution, and officials are announcing a wider __________ of emergency measures for the worst days. On Tuesday, the Beijing government adopted a plan for emergencies when the forecast calls for three or more days with pollution rated as serious. A “red alert” would be issued, schools would be shut down and use of private cars would be limited to alternate days, depending on their license plate numbers.

Skeptics point out that wealthier households can buy extra vehicles to get around that rule. And Beijing News said in its editorial that on “red alert” days, everyone should stay home, not just children. “Faced with the increasingly serious pollution levels in Beijing,” it said, “coupled with the carelessness of residents in protecting themselves against pollution, the emergency plan is still inadequate.”

Match the words and expressions below with their definitions. Then complete the gaps in the article.

a) stopgap h) swiftly

b) curb i) hazardous

c) stepping up j) regulators

d) fanned out

e) discharge k) have followed suit

f) miasma l) urbanites

g) scream bloody murder m) array

1) People or organizations who make sure that a system operates properly or fairly.

2) Dirty air or a thick unpleasant mist that smell bad.

3) Happening or done quickly and immediately.

4) Increasing the amount of an activity or the speed of a process in order to improve a situation.

5) Something or someone that you use for a short time until you can replace them with something better.

6) People living in a city.

7) Complain loudly and unduly.

8) Walked forward while spreading over a wide area.

9) Have done the same as someone else.

10) To send out gas, liquid, smoke etc., or to allow it to escape.

11) A group of people or things, especially one that is large or impressive.

12) To control or limit something in order to prevent it from having a harmful effect.

13) Dangerous, especially to people’s health or safety.

Questions for discussion

1) Do you believe it will be possible to use non-polluting energy sources one day? If yes, what kind of energy will it be?

2) In view of the recent smog talk in Cracow, what are the ways to bring down the level of air pollution. Why do you think it is difficult to implement pro-eco measures?

3) What are the ways in which your local community is trying to help the environment? Have you ever participated in any project oriented at controlling pollution, litter etc.?

The cost of China’s massive growth that the environment and people have to bear is the subject of the following video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQaiJxK-qZY


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