Air pollution has hit 180 of 338 Chinese cities with 42 of them, including Beijing and Tianjin, categorised as “heavily polluted,” the Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) announced on Saturday.
The most affected cities are mainly located in the Beijing —Tianjin—Hebei region and northwest China, while pollution in the 180 cities was at prefecture level or above.
Beijing had a relatively better day on Saturday after a cold front cleared smog which enveloped the city on Friday coinciding with the opening of China’s Parliament sessions.
Some legislators made a case for “smog tax” to punish the polluting industries.
Beijing was among the hardest hit, with an average PM2.5 density of 315 micrograms per cubic meter.
The MEP predicted the smog will ease gradually on Saturday and disappear by Monday thanks to the arrival of a cold front.
In his work report to the National People’s Congress, Premier Li Keqiang said average intensity of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) dropped by 14.1 per cent in 74 cities where the new ambient air quality standards were first applied last year.