Off the wire
Sick wild panda saved in SW China  • Weather forecast for major Chinese cities, regions -- April 22  • China condemns foreign interference in Tibet issue  • Weather forecast for world cities -- April 22  • Interview: Expert urges self-sustaining sanitation models for West Africa  • Roundup: Fighting, airstrikes continue in Yemen despite declared halt of air raids  • Lenovo recalls defective laptop batteries  • (Sports) Race date, line-up of 62nd Macao Grand Prix unveiled  • China welcomes end of Yemen air raids  • Abe should admit Japan's WWII atrocities in upcoming speech to U.S. Congress: expert  
You are here:   Home

Chinese cities less smoggy in March

Xinhua, April 22, 2015 Adjust font size:

Chinese cities reported more days with sound air quality on average in March compared with a year ago, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said on Wednesday.

In a monthly report, the ministry said the 74 cities under its watch reported air pollution on 28.9 percent of the days last month, down from 37.7 percent in March 2013.

Though Beijing and its 12 neighboring cities in north China's Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region also saw a slight increase in days of sound air quality, the proportion of their smoggy days more than doubled the country's average.

The chief pollutant in the region was PM2.5, followed by PM10.

The ministry said seven of the 10 Chinese cities reporting the worst air quality last month were in Hebei Province, which neighbors Beijing. The other three cities were Zhengzhou, Jinan and Shenyang.

China began to include PM2.5, a key indicator of air pollution, and ozone in its new air quality standard in 2013. Endi