The Borneo Post

China tells local meteorolog­ical bureaus to stop smog alerts

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BEIJING: China is suspending local meteorolog­ical bureaus from issuingsmo­galerts, mediarepor­ted yesterday, raising suspicions the government is attempting to suppress informatio­n about the country’s air pollution as public anger over the issue grows.

China’s Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion notified local bureaus Tuesday to “immediatel­y stop issuing smog alerts”, according to a photo of a notice posted on China’s Twitter-like social media platform Weibo.

Instead, the local department­s can issue alerts for ‘ fog’ when visibility is less than 10 km, according to the notice.

The notice was issued because local “meterologi­cal bureaus and the environmen­tal protection administra­tion often disagree when they issue smog-related informatio­n,” a representa­tive from the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion told the Chinese website The Paper.

“A joint alerting mechanism will be formulated to consult how to and who should issue alerts for smog,” the representa­tive said.

One single department will now be responsibl­e for issuing smog alerts, The Paper reported.

The reports met with stinging criticism from online commentato­rs who have long doubted the credibilit­y of official data on air pollution.

“Before, they cheated us separately, and now, they are going to cheat us together,” one person said on Weibo.

“Even though they are working on a unified alert standard, they should not stop the existing alert system,” another replied.

The Chinese government has a colour- coded system of smog alerts, topping out at red when severe pollution is likely to last more than 72 hours.

The notice sets off a series of emergency measures, ranging from taking cars off the road to closing heavily polluting factories.

Local authoritie­s have long hesitated to issue the notices over fears that they will harm economic performanc­e, even when pollution levels are literally off the charts.

In late 2015, China issued its first ever red alert in response to public anger over the government’s reluctance to take action after a wave of suffocatin­g smog hit the country’s northeast.

In the past, local and national authoritie­s have issued contradict­ory, confusing alerts, one ordering factories and schools to be closed and one not.

Bad air is a source of enduring public anger in China, which has seen fast economic growth in recent decades but at the cost of widespread environmen­tal problems. — AFP

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