Smog sinks Hong Kong's famous skyline
On top of Victoria Peak in Hong Kong, groups of tourists find
themselves staring down at an apocalyptic vision of a towering city
shrouded in a menacing grey smog.
The haze blurs one of the world's most famous skylines and veils the
ships dotting the harbour, disappointing visitors who made the trip to
the Peak for a glimpse of what can be a spectacular panorama.
When a scene like this was captured on the cover of the Hong Kong
edition of the "Lonely Planet" travel guide in 2002, shocked and
embarrassed policymakers claimed the image did not truly reflect the
southern Chinese city. But a hazy sky has become an inescapable part of
life for Hong Kong's population of seven million.
Statistics from the Hong Kong Observatory show that the annual number
of hours of "reduced visibility" jumped from 295 in 1988 to 1,100 in
2008.
The term refers to visibility of less than eight kilometres (five
miles) in the absence of fog, mist or rain.
"Blue skies are very rare in Hong Kong today," Professor Anthony
Hedley of the Department of Community Medicine at the University of Hong
Kong told AFP.
"There are very few days in which our air quality meets the safety
guidelines promulgated by the World Health Organisation."
The haze in Hong Kong is formed by a combination of particles and
gases generated by power plants, ships, vehicles and tens of thousands
of factories in neighbouring Guangdong province in mainland China,
experts say.
"It is a very toxic cocktail. The suspended particulates are so fine
that they can penetrate to the very lowest region of our lungs, even
cross into our (blood) circulation and damage our arteries as well as
the air sacs," Hedley said.
Natural mist or fog was only a tiny component of the haze in times of
high humidity, he said.
The problem is particularly acute in a city as densely packed as Hong
Kong, as pollutants are often trapped between the buildings.
Although the government has in recent years pledged increased efforts
to clean the air, critics say it is not aggressive enough.
"At this rate we are going, it's going to be 50 years before we get
clean air," Hedley said.
The professor and a team at the university launched the Hedley
Environmental Index last year to provide real-time measurements of the
health and financial impacts of air pollution in Hong Kong.
The index showed that between January and mid-December this year
health care and lost productivity related to air pollution illnesses had
cost the city about 1.8 billion Hong Kong dollars (231 million US).
The team estimated that a total of 5.9 million doctor visits and 793
premature deaths were related to air pollution over the same period.
Hedley said he had found a direct correlation between visibility and
health in his latest research.
His findings, due to be released within a few months, will allow
anybody to estimate the number of expected air pollution-related deaths
based on the visibility level on that day.
AFP |