Visibility Deteriorates as Pollution Cloaks China’s Capital

Visibility Deteriorates as Pollution Cloaks China’s Capital
A surveillance camera points at a terrace of a shopping mall overlooking the skyline of the Central Business District on a polluted day in Beijing, China, on Nov. 5, 2021. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)
Reuters
11/5/2021
Updated:
11/5/2021

BEIJING—Visibility in parts of Beijing was less than 219 yards on Friday as heavy pollution shrouded the Chinese capital, forcing the closures of some highways.

Beijing issued its first heavy pollution alert for the fall and winter on Thursday, requiring the suspension of some outdoor construction, factory operations, and outdoor school activities.

Visibility has been severely limited with the tops of the city’s tallest buildings vanishing in the haze.

The Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region often suffers from heavy smog in the fall and winter, especially on days without wind.

A cold wave arriving from Siberia over the weekend is expected to disperse the pollution.

China aims to cut concentrations of hazardous, small airborne particles known as PM2.5 by an average of 4 percent year on year in main cities this winter, the environment ministry said last month.

The PM2.5 level in urban areas reached as high as 234 micrograms per cubic meter on Friday, according to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, indicating very unhealthy air.

China’s overall 2021-22 winter campaign against pollution will be waged in as many as 64 cities throughout the industrialized, smog-prone north, the ministry said in September.

China is due to host the Winter Olympics in Beijing and the nearby city of Zhangjiakou on Feb. 4–20.

By Albee Zhang and Ryan Woo