China Allows Media to Report on Air Pollution Crisis
Comment of the Day

January 14 2013

Commentary by David Fuller

China Allows Media to Report on Air Pollution Crisis

This is an important development, reported by the International Herald Tribune (subscription required but here is a PDF). Here is the opening
BEIJING - The Chinese state news media on Monday published aggressive reports on what they described as the sickening and dangerous air pollution in Beijing and other parts of northern China, indicating that popular anger over air quality had reached a level where Communist Party propaganda officials felt that they had to allow the officially sanctioned press to address the growing concerns of ordinary citizens.

The across-the-board coverage of Beijing's brown, soupy air, which has been consistently rated "hazardous" or even worse by foreign and local monitors since last week, was the most open in recent memory. Since 2008, when Beijing made efforts to clean up the city before the Summer Olympics, the air has appeared to degrade in the view of many residents, though the official news media have often avoided addressing the problem.

The wide coverage on Monday appears to be in part a reaction to the conversation that has been unfolding on Chinese microblogs, where residents of northern China have been discussing the pollution nonstop in recent days.

The problem is so serious - the worst air quality since the United States Embassy began recording levels in 2008 - that hospitals reported on Monday a surge in patient admissions for respiratory problems, and Beijing officials ordered government cars off the road to try to curb the pollution, which some people say has been exacerbated by a weather phenomenon, called an inversion, that is trapping dirty particles.

David Fuller's view This is an alarming situation but in allowing all the media coverage I assume that China's new government intends to tackle the pollution problem vigorously. It will have to.

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