Environment
£177bn bill to clean up China’s air pollution
China must pay 1.75 trillion yuan (£177 billion) to tackle its air pollution crisis, according to Wang Jinnan, deputy head of the Chinese Academy for Environmental Planning.
Around 37% of this sum should go to cleaning up industry while 28% would also be used to develop and implement cleaner energy sources. Making vehicles more sustainable as well will cost 210 billion yaun (£21 billion), reports Chinese news agency Xinhua.
The money would come as a result of the Air Pollution Prevention and Control Action Plan, which according to Wang would save money in the long term, by driving up GDP by nearly two trillion yuan (£200 billion) and create over two million jobs.
Wang’s comments come just weeks after particulate pollutants in Shanghai reached unprecedented levels. The financial hub was covered by thick smog that reduced visibility to less than 50 meters. This latest crisis also caused China’s environmental stocks to rise.
Air pollution from coal plants alone has been linked to 250,000 premature deaths in China in 2011, while harming hundreds of thousands of children across the country.
The country has recently taken steps to limit its coal consumption, including plans that will ban new coal-fired plants in regions that already have 30% of the country’s coal-fired power generation capacity. Last month the Chinese government announced that they would begin allowing private capital to be invested in renewable energy and environmental protection.
Further reading:
Chinese coal pollution ‘responsible for 250,000 deaths’ in 2011
Australian coal industry ‘threatened’ by Chinese environmental law
China: We are not prepared for climate change
China’s environmental stocks rise amid record levels of air pollution
Shanghai children told to stay indoors because of air pollution
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