‘This week, no one’: Hazardous pollution deters tourists from Thailand

High levels of air pollution is seen from the top of Doi Suthep temple in Chiang Mai on April 11, 2023. PHOTO: AFP

CHIANG MAI - Hazardous pollution levels in northern Thailand have left the historic city of Chiang Mai choking under thick smog, with locals worried about the impact on tourism – and their health.

Smoke from forest fires and farmers burning crop stubble has suffocated the tourist city, with global air monitoring platform IQAir ranking it among the most polluted places in the world – above regular hotspots such as Lahore and Delhi.

Residents have petitioned the government to act, with images and videos of the dense haze capturing public attention in the run-up to May’s much-anticipated national election.

On Tuesday, daily life in Chiang Mai continued, even as records showed the level of the dangerous PM2.5 particles – so tiny they can enter the bloodstream – was more than 30 times the World Health Organisation’s annual guideline, according to IQAir.

“It made me want to cry,” said Ms Kanchaya Boontan, 40, who runs CM Siam Travel, a tourism firm.

“This year is bad, normally pollution is not too long but the foreigners have seen the news,” she added, adjusting her N95 mask.

Forced to close all four of her shops during the Covid-19 pandemic, Ms Boontan was just starting to get back on her feet by working 12-hour shifts.

But last week, the Thai Hotel Association Northern Chapter warned that domestic tourists were cancelling their Songkran New Year holiday reservations due to pollution levels.

“Last week I got one customer only. This week, no one,” said Ms Boontan.

A few streets away by the ancient Tha Phae gate, 45-year-old orange juice vendor Aun tried to drum up business.

“It’s affecting my life more and more every day, whether it be my health or the decline in the number of tourists,” he said.

“Some days you can barely see the roads ahead, and it’s not fog but it’s smog.”

The pollution is mainly caused by farmers burning their fields, said Dr Siwatt Pongpiachan, an atmospheric consultant with the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand.

A shifting global weather pattern and Chiang Mai’s topography trapping pollution conspired to “drive PM 2.5 into the perfect storm this year”, he said.

An Air Asia plane descends towards Chiang Mai International Airport amid high levels of air pollution in the city on April 10, 2023. PHOTO: AFP

In 2023 alone, nearly two million people in Thailand have needed hospital treatment for respiratory conditions caused by air pollution, according to the Public Health Ministry.

Chiang Mai cardiologist Rungsrit Kanjanavanit said that officials are not doing enough to tackle the pollution, worried about its impact on the country’s vital tourist economy.

“We should care about our guests’ health more – that should be a priority.”

The pollution impacts children and the elderly the most, Dr Kanjanavanit added.

“For every 10 micrograms per mil increase in PM2.5, there is one year less of lifespan. You have to multiply it by the exposure range,” he said.

“Everyone breathes, so the effect on the population is very high.”

Bright red sun

“The sun was really bright red because of the smoke in the sky, (it) was quite, quite strange and very hazy,” said British tourist Lucy Cooper.

“You couldn’t see much further than a few fields away,” she added.

A visitor looking out at high levels of air pollution from the top of Doi Suthep temple in Chiang Mai on April 11, 2023. PHOTO: AFP

The 34-year-old, travelling with her partner and two children, said she was advised not to come.

“It’s not ideal. And we can’t see a mountain, which is sad.”

Mr Chokchai Mongkolcho, visiting from north-eastern Roi Et province, said the smog “hides the city’s beauty”.

“It makes me wonder if I’ll ever come back here again if there’s still pollution like this.” AFP

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