Air quality improves in Beijing with move to cleaner fuel
The photo shows the air quality in Beijing on December 11, 2017. [Photo: VCG]
"As of Sunday, seriously polluted days this year reduced to 21, from 58 in 2013, and only four seriously polluted days were recorded so far this winter," said Liu Baoxian, deputy director of the Beijing Municipal Environmental Monitoring Center.
In a bid to make air cleaner, Beijing has been eliminating coal-fired boilers and upgrading gas-fired boilers with low nitrogen combustion technology.
The density of sulfur dioxide has been reduced to 8 micrograms per cubic meter as of November from 28 microgram per cubic meter in 2013. The city eliminated 4,453 coal-fired boilers this year.
As of Nov. 15, Beijing finished work replacing coal with clean energy -- electricity or gas -- in 700 villages, according to the municipal commission of rural affairs.
Over the past five years, about 99.8 percent of the city's coal-fired boilers have been removed, cutting the use of coal by nearly 9 million tonnes.
Since 2013, about 900,000 households in 2,036 villages have shifted from coal to clean energy, cutting the use of coal by 2.7 million tonnes per year.