New sites on air quality

Thanks to Michael Wester I discovered this site:
http://www.amfic.eu/index.php
And their “air quality bulletin” – you can select Location, etc.
http://www.amfic.eu/bulletin/index.php
Seems they have terrific information on air quality. I will need to keep a close eye.
Another one I will explore further but looks interesting:
http://www.myhealthbeijing.com (by Richard Saint Cyr)
I will need to study those and fine-tune my overviews on Beijing pollution.

The farce of blue skies

Beijing continues to force feed us with their blue-sky lies. Unfortunately some naïve foreigners fall for it. “Official” API figures for the city are often by miracle just up to 100. U.S. AQI Twitter figures are on the average 2 to 2.5 higher. Recently we had several days with AQI between 400 and 500. But Beijing remains proud with its cooked-up figures that demonstrate the air is continuously getting better. Some Chinese specialists (says China Daily) now dare to suggest some “improvements” for the measurements like taking into account PM2.5, ozone, etc.
The usual argument that the Twitter readings are “high because done in a high traffic area” is total nonsense, served with a straight face. What about their measurements in Dongsi and Agricultural Palace?
Keep on coughing! Or buy a good air filter (made in USA or Switzerland).
Some said the air was so good during the visit of president Obama because “the Chinese did something”. No you blockheads, say thanks to the cold wind that blew away all the s###. We did have some fabulous good days – now over again.
The crap I have to hear from some “well informed foreigners” is sometimes pathetic.
I still need to update my charts for the past months but don’t feel the urgency – it’s all artificial. Except if I use Twitter but their figures are not 7/7 nor 24/24. Guess those guys need a break to wash down the dust with some Tsingtao Beer.

Typical criticism of China

See here below Letter to the Editor, International Herald Tribune (IHT), 15 Sept 09.
I don’t disagree with the writer for most of the criticism and thus feel no need to comment. What’s wrong with it, is the typical one-sided analysis of China, lacking balance in assessing the positive and the negative. I can as well frame it and put on my wall because this is what western media mostly show or write.
When I look at other countries today around the world, I see much worse. The IHT is at least fair in giving a neutral view on the dramatic situations in Africa, Asia and … Europe and the USA. Those countries also cozy up with despotic and despicable countries for oil, regional power, business and else. In so many countries minorities are slaughtered every day. Look at discrimination and infighting in our “advanced” Europe.
Pollution in some countries (even sometimes in USA!) also reaches alarming levels that are either ignored or covered up. Europe and USA has so much more cars. On top of that, they are very happy to sell their cars (including the monstrous Hummer) to China. So, Chinese cannot have their car like in the western world? Are they all supposed to stick to their bikes? See here some figures of car ownership in the world:
Car ownership/1000 people: USA & Japan (>450); China (20); India (8) – 17,000 new private cars on the road in China per day. Just imagine China goes from 20 to 100 – that’s 5 times the today amount of cars but still way below USA and Japan.
It’s all a lot of cynical one-sided hypocrisy.
I can give Mr. Hewitt some nice destinations to spend his holidays. Lucky at least he is not a woman. He might end up stoned, raped, receive 60 lashes, maimed. But hey, there is oil over there, never mind.
I can only recommend to him: don’t go to Wal-Mart or whatever. It’s all made in China. (handy profits for the MNCs, all quoted on U.S. and EU stock markets.)
We here do criticize China too. We are not blind but we also look at the bright side.
One party of autocrats
Thomas Friedman (One-party democracy,” Views, Sept.10) writes “One-party autocracy certainly has its drawbacks. But when it is led by a reasonably enlightened group of people, as China is today, it can also have great advantages.” This statement is, to be kind, scandalous. China is a police state. China’s leaders have brutally repressed the populations of Tibet and East Turkestan for many decades. The Chinese leadership strongly supports regimes in Zimbabwe, Sudan, Myanmar and North Korea that have consistently ravaged their own people. China is itself corrupt. Nearly unabated air and water pollution devastates the health of the Chinese people.
Mr. Friedman’s argument for the “enlightened” nature of the Chinese leadership hinges on its embrace of renewable energy technology. It should be noted, however, that China continues to build scores of new coal-fired power plants annually, while the nation is in a headlong rush to put hundreds of thousands of new cars on its new roads. And, for my money, its rush to nuclear power does not in the least indicate the requisite thoughtfulness and attention to environmental protection that would allow its leadership to be called enlightened.
William F. Hewitt, New York

blue skies or not?

Beijing continues to force-feed us with their blue sky propaganda. For sure some foreigners will fall for it, especially after the really blue looking skies we had a couple of days ago.

7 August - China Daily

7 August - China Daily


Now, the pollution is coming back with a revenge and BEPB has to admit we are over API 100.
That is all misleading. When earlier this week we had gorgeous blue sky the situation was in fact not so good. AQI as per our Twitter friends showed values of close to or higher than 200 – unhealthy. The PM2.5 are dangerous because if there are no other major particles the sky looks great. We have the same problem in Belgium where often the sky looks great but not the PM2.5.
When pollution hit later in the week we reached AQI of 450 – HAZARDOUS, avoid going outside and any physical activity.
BEPB reported figures like API 120. As a rule you multiply the API by 3 to have some representative AQI.
I am looking to leave Beijing again this Wednesday, hopefully to breathe better air.

API overview for July 2009

edit /update 2 August 09
So, here comes the big obfuscation of the truth. The official API figures as from our BEPB who proudly can say there were soooo many blue sky days in Beijing.

click to enlarge

click to enlarge


Some naïve foreigners (CNN lazy journalists included) swallow it all, look in amazement at the blue sky. Funny, haven’t seen actually much sky and neither the buildings around me. The air has been very bad for many days as confirmed by the U.S. Twitter data. Those average AQI 180 roughly (“unhealthy”) but with peaks of over 400 and one of 500 (HAZARDOUS). Of course BEPB is not any time soon going to measure PM2.5. Too embarrassing.
According to BEPB, up to now we had in Beijing 172 days of “blue sky” (API lower or equal to 100). The goal for 2009 is 260 days (71%). Looks like they will have their gold medal of misleading this year.
Obviously the BEPB loses all credibility. So, for some time I will stop recording their data as it is a waste of time.
Source: China Daily - click to enlarge

Source: China Daily - click to enlarge


Yes, you dummies, the Twitter stuff is in a bad area, called CBD. Oops, see the attached official ENLARGED CBD area that is still a taxi ride far from the embassy. And Dongsi is overall worse.
Not to wonder parents have to make a tough choice – raise their kids in this hazardous environment or head back home where they might not have a job.
Sounds like Chinese migrants working in hazardous factories where they end up with irreversible lung damage. According to China Daily, nearly 640,000 people suffer from pneumoconiosis in China today.
Cartoon South China Morning Post

Cartoon South China Morning Post


Then to say our “compatriots” in Hongkong worry about their “bad” air. Probably much better than here. They now also push to measure PM2.5.