Tackling Air Pollution in China—What do We Learn from the Great Smog of 1950s in LONDON
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Social and Economic Consequences of the Smog in China
3. Causes of Smog
3.1. Coal Burning
3.2. Industrial Pollution
3.3. Vehicle Emissions
3.4. Other Factors
4. Tackling the Smog
4.1. Policy Changes in London after the Smog
- (1)
- “Smokeless zones” and “smoke control areas” were set up in some towns and cities in which only smokeless fuels could be burned.
- (2)
- Sources of household heating were shifted from coal to cleaner coals, electricity, and gas.
- (3)
- Measures were also introduced to relocate power stations away from cities, and the height of some chimneys were required to be increased.
- (1)
- In the short term, targeting emissions reductions from the most polluting vehicles, mainly heavier diesel vehicles, such as buses, coaches, goods vehicles, waste vehicles, and taxis.
- (2)
- Increasing the take-up of newer, cleaner vehicles and technologies.
- (3)
- Increasing the take-up of cleaner fuels.
- (4)
- Introducing low emission zones in London, which would exclude the most polluting vehicles from specified areas.
- (5)
- For the long term, promoting zero emission forms of transport, such as hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.
4.2. China’s Way to Clean Air
4.2.1. Law Enforcement
- China’s Air Pollution Prevention and Control Law (first adopted in 1995, first amended in 2000, and reopened in 2013 for new update)
- National 10 Measures (adopted in June 2013)
- Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control (Action Plan, adopted in September 2013)
- Environmental Protection Law (first adopted in 1989, reopened for update in 2012, and passed in April 2014)
- Performance Assessment Measures for Air Pollution Prevention and Control Action Plan (for trial implementation) (adopted in April 2014)
- Building a Beautiful Tianjin Programme (adopted in August 2013)
- Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control in Jing-Jin-Ji and Surrounding Areas—Details for implementation (adopted in September 2013)
- Action Plan of Beijing City for Clean Air 2013–2017 (adopted in September 2013)
- Implementation Details of Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control in Hebei Province (adopted in September 2013)
- Action Plan of Shanghai City for Clean Air 2013–2017 (adopted in October 2013)
- Action Plan of Guangdong Province for Air Pollution Prevention and Control 2014–2017 (adopted in February 2014)
- The 2014 Action Plan for Air Pollution Prevention and Control in Shan’xi Province (adopted in April 2014)
- Action Plan of Henan Province for the Blue Sky (adopted in May 2014)
- (1)
- Strengthening the comprehensive efforts to reduce emission of multi-pollutants.
- (2)
- Promoting industrial upgrading and restructuring.
- (3)
- Accelerating companies’ technology upgrading and increasing their technological innovation capacities.
- (4)
- Accelerating energy restructuring to increase clean energy supply.
- (5)
- Enforcing energy-saving and environmental protection as market entrance requirements.
- (6)
- Imposing strict approval requirements for new investment projects regarding energy-saving and environmental protection, and restricting the investment of industries with high energy consumption and high pollution levels in environmentally vulnerable areas.
- (7)
- Improving legal framework, implementation and enforcement.
- (8)
- Establishing monitoring, alerting and emergency response systems for air pollution episodes.
- (9)
- Defining responsibilities for environmental protection between the government, private sector and the public.
- (10)
- Establishing a regional coordination mechanism to coordinate regional environmental governance.
- (1)
- For all second and third tier cities, annual average concentration of PM10 should be reduced by at least 10% comparing to the 2012 level, and the number of days with clean air should be increased.
- (2)
- For the three key regions, the annual average concentration of PM2.5 should be reduced by 25%, 20% and 15% respectively.
- (3)
- For Beijing, the annual average concentration of PM2.5 should be controlled at 60 μg/m3 level.
- (1)
- By 2017, the proportion of coal in total energy consumption in China will be reduced to 65% of that in 2012, while the proportion of non-fossil energy consumption will be increased to 13%. The three key regions shall make efforts to achieve negative growth of total coal consumption, and replace coal with natural gas for coal-fired boilers, industrial furnaces, and self-sustained coal-fired power stations.
- (2)
- By 2015, all yellow-labelled vehicles (vehicle registered before the end of 2005) shall be phased out in the three key regions. By 2017, all yellow-labelled vehicles will be phased out nationwide.
- (3)
- Cleaner gasoline and diesel will be provided step by step, and by 2017 China V gasoline and diesel will be used for all vehicles in China nationwide.
4.2.2. The Gap between Legislation and Implementation
4.2.3. Democracy and Pollution
4.3. Public Awareness
5. Discussion and Recommendations
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Zhang, D.; Liu, J.; Li, B. Tackling Air Pollution in China—What do We Learn from the Great Smog of 1950s in LONDON. Sustainability 2014, 6, 5322-5338. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6085322
Zhang D, Liu J, Li B. Tackling Air Pollution in China—What do We Learn from the Great Smog of 1950s in LONDON. Sustainability. 2014; 6(8):5322-5338. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6085322
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Dongyong, Junjuan Liu, and Bingjun Li. 2014. "Tackling Air Pollution in China—What do We Learn from the Great Smog of 1950s in LONDON" Sustainability 6, no. 8: 5322-5338. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6085322
APA StyleZhang, D., Liu, J., & Li, B. (2014). Tackling Air Pollution in China—What do We Learn from the Great Smog of 1950s in LONDON. Sustainability, 6(8), 5322-5338. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6085322