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Chinese new year celebrated with fewer fireworks to contain pollution

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China welcomed the year of the horse on Thursday night with fewer fireworks than usual, in an effort to emit less air pollution in its smog-choked cities.

The Beijing Municipal Environmental Monitoring Centre and the capital’s local government invited residents to reduce the amount of smog caused by fireworks during the new year celebration.

To maintain good air quality and build a beautiful Being together, we suggest you set off fewer fireworks or don’t set them off at all. If the air pollution reaches the orange or red level, fireworks are forbidden”, a government statement said.

While fireworks are an important tradition for Chinese people during the festivity, they have often caused pollution to rise beyond hazardous levels in previous years, as they release fine particulate matter known as PM2.5.

According to local authorities, the average reading of PM2.5 this year was 140-160 micrograms per cubic metre. This is significantly lower compared than the 1,000 micrograms per cubic metre recorded last year.

China faces enormous pollution problems in its largest cities, where hazardous toxic levels are continuously registered. The country recently announced measures to tackle the problem by stopping new coal-fired power plants, investing in renewable energy and setting up financing programmes to clean its air.

Prime minister David Cameron sent a message to the UK’s Chinese community to mark the start of the year of the horse, saying, “On this new year, I want to pay tribute to the incredible contribution that the British Chinese community makes to this country.

“So let me once again wish you a happy new year and every possible success for the next 12 months. Happy new year.”

Further reading:

Smog in Beijing 25 times more dangerous than safe levels

Ex-Chinese health minister warns of 500,000 smog deaths

Air pollution blamed after Chinese girl, 8, gets lung cancer

£177bn bill to clean up China’s air pollution

China: We are not prepared for climate change

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