China puts a price on fresh air as smog becomes hazardous
BEIJING: A Chinese entrepreneur is selling fresh air in soft drink cans, similar to bottled drinking water, as north China is once again choking in toxic smog.
The concentration of airborne PM 2.5 particulates - the smallest and most deadly - went off the chart in the early hours of Tuesday morning for the second time this month, according to the pollution gauge at the American embassy in Beijing.
The air quality index, designed by the US Environmental Protection Agency, cannot cope with levels beyond 500, which is 20 times the World Health Organisation air quality standard.
The embassy gauge had been hovering in the merely ''hazardous'' 300-500 range since Friday.
Chen Guangbiao sells his cans of air for five yuan (75¢) each. It comes in atmospheric flavours including pristine Tibet, post-industrial Taiwan and revolutionary Yan'an, the Communist Party's early base area.
Mr Chen told Fairfax Media he wanted to make a point that China's air was turning so bad that the idea of bottled fresh air was no longer fanciful.
Highest levels since records began ... Severe pollution clouds the Beijing skyline on January 12.
Highest levels since records began ... Severe pollution clouds the Beijing skyline on January 12. Photo: AFP
''If we don't start caring for the environment, then after 20 or 30 years our children and grandchildren might be wearing gas masks and carry oxygen tanks,'' said Mr Chen.
Earlier this month, the concentration of airborne PM 2.5 particulates in Beijing and other cities reached the highest levels since measurements began.
The event dominated even state-controlled news outlets, hospitals reported a sharp rise in respiratory-related admissions and political leaders took emergency pollution-reduction measures and vowed to tackle the underlying problems.
Since then, the Beijing skyline has remained mostly bleak, with visibility dropping as low as 200 metres several times in the past few days.
NASA satellite photos show a thick grey haze has regularly rendered the densely populated plains of North China invisible from outer space.
Residents of Beijing have begun snapping up products less novel than Mr Chen's creation. Chris Buckley, proprietor of Torana Clean Air Centre, said there had been a dramatic increase in the flow of local customers through his stores, rather than just expatriates, reflecting more open coverage in China's tightly controlled media as well as the severity of the pollution.
Mr Buckley sells air purifying machines and pollution masks. His customers have been placed on long waiting lists as manufacturers have been unable to keep pace with demand.
''We've sold thousands of masks in the last three weeks,'' he said.
The Beijing mayor vowed to take tough new measures to reduce coal consumption, scrap old cars, restrict construction dust and improve energy intensity, according to Tuesday's People's Daily.
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