Haze continues to shroud east, north China
Updated:
2013-12-07 16:49( Xinhua)
Heavy smog shrouds Ganyu county in
Lianyungang city, East China's Jiangsu province, Dec 7, 2013.
[Photo/Xinhua]
BEIJING - Heavy haze still shrouded north and east China on
Saturday, with highways closed and flights delayed or canceled
following an orange alert for haze.
Following a yellow alert for heavy fog at 6:00 am Saturday
Beijing Time, the National Meteorological Center (NMC) issued an
orange alert for haze four hours later.
China uses a four-tier warning system for extreme weather and
air pollution, with red being the most serious, followed by orange,
yellow and blue.
The NMC said on its website that from 2:00 pm on Saturday to
2:00 pm on Sunday, the Yangtze Delta region and central and
southern parts of north China, including central and southern
Beijing, will suffer level four to five air pollution, with the
heaviest level six pollution in some areas.
Most of those areas will have moderate haze, while Jiangsu
province, northern Zhejiang province, eastern Anhui province, and
central and southern Hebei province will have heavy haze, said the
NMC.
More than 100 entries to highways in east China's Shandong
province were temporarily closed due to haze, and some flights were
canceled or delayed at the Jinan and Qingdao airports.
In Jiangsu province, most expressways were closed due to heavy
haze. In the provincial capital of Nanjing, red alerts for air
pollution and orange alerts for heavy fog were in effect. Suzhou,
Wuxi and other cities in the province also suffered the heaviest
grade of air pollution.
Even in Nanning, capital city of south China's Guangxi Zhuang
autonomous region, which generally enjoys much better air quality
compared to other areas, was shrouded in haze on Saturday. The
local meteorological department issued an orange alert for haze on
Friday, the first this autumn.
Haze began to hit the central and eastern areas of the country
on Wednesday. He Lifu, chief meteorologist with the CMC, described
this wave of haze in a meeting earlier this week as the severest so
far this winter.
The Ministry of Environmental Protection said earlier this
week that there were three major reasons behind the widespread
haze: unfavorable weather conditions making it difficult for
pollutants to diffuse, motor vehicle exhaust, and coal consumption
for winter heating.
The ministry said that, thanks to a strong cold front, the air
quality in north China and east China's Yangtze Delta area will
significantly improve between Sunday and Wednesday next week.
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Local governments in eight cities in Liaoning province have been fined a total of 54.2 million yuan ($8.9 million) for air pollution.
Air quality to be better from today, officials
say

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