China's air pollution shifts west in first quarter: Greenpeace

Buildings are seen during a moderately polluted day in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China, on April 19, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

BEIJING (AFP) - Air pollution in western China jumped in the first three months of 2016, a Greenpeace report showed on Wednesday (April 20), while the vast majority of cities throughout the country failed to meet national standards.

China's cities are often hit by heavy pollution, blamed on coal-burning by power stations, heavy industry and vehicle use, and it has become a major source of discontent with the ruling Communist Party.

Government policy was effectively moving pollution from the heavily-populated cities of the eastern seaboard to other areas, Greenpeace said.

The five cities with the highest level of PM2.5 particulates - small enough to deeply penetrate the lungs - were all in the westernmost region of Xinjiang, a sometimes violence-prone area home to China's 10 million Uighurs, a Turkic Muslim people.

Kashgar, an ancient oasis town on the Silk Road, was by far the most polluted city with an average PM2.5 concentration of 276.1 micrograms per cubic metre for the three months of this year, government data compiled by Greenpeace showed - up 99 per cent on the same period last year.

It went up 49 per cent in the city of Hotan, also in Xinjiang.

Kashgar's average concentration was more than 27 times the maximum annual average of 10 micrograms per cubic metre recommended by the World Health Organisation (WHO).

The capital Beijing saw PM2.5 levels fall 27 per cent to 67.7 micrograms per cubic metre, while in the financial hub Shanghai they declined 12 per cent to 60 micrograms per cubic metre.

Beijing "has enacted many pollution limiting guidelines in the east that have had the unintended effect of encouraging pollution emitting industry to shift investment to central and western areas that have yet to become subject to the same controls", Greenpeace said.

New coal-fired power plants have been concentrated in western regions, with 75 per cent of permits in 2015 granted in central or western China, according to the environmental group's analysis, which used data from China's Ministry of Environmental Protection.

The average PM2.5 concentration for the 362 cities monitored was 60.7 micrograms per cubic metre, with 310 cities failing to meet China's own standard of 35 micrograms per cubic metre.

Public discontent about the environment has grown in China, leading the government to declare a "war on pollution" and vow to reduce the proportion of energy derived from fossil fuels.

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