There is a possibility
that the authorities may implement even tighter controls
on vehicle access to the roads of Beijing as we get
closer to the opening of the Olympics this coming Friday,
August 8. We will keep you advised accordingly.
I also take this opportunity to remind everyone that
whilst the Olympics finish August 24, they are immediately
followed by the Paralympics running September 6 -17.
The Beijing Traffic Restrictions run through to September
20.
For more details and access to the Olympics web site,
go to http://en.beijing2008.cn/
then on the upper right hand side is a search engine
just above Bulletins | Media. Type
in ^Traffic Restrictions ̄ for the latest news or use
the following hyperlink http://search.beijing2008.cn/wssu/owrpSearchResult.jsp
Below was extracted from the official website of
the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.
China may expand
industry, traffic control for cleaner air during Olympics
Updated: 2008-07-31 From: Xinhuanet
BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) -- Beijing and the neighboring
areas may impose stricter measures to curb industrial
and vehicle emission in case of serious air pollution
during the Olympics, according to China's environmental
watchdog.
Beijing, Tianjin, and Hebei Province will expand
their current curbs on cars and factories, should
meteorological departments foresee an unfavorable
air quality induced by "extreme unfavorable weather
conditions" in the coming two days, a report
on the website of China's Ministry of Environmental
Protection said.
Under such circumstances, Beijing would shut down
105 more electric, furniture, building material and
chemical plants, halt all construction work, and pull
more vehicles off the road.
In Tianjin, 56 more coal-fueled power companies,
coal-fired heating projects, building materials, electric
and chemical factories would be suspended from production
in case of unfavorable air quality forecasts, with
cars banned on alternate days according to their odd
or even plate numbers.
Similar measure would be carried out in Hebei Province's
Zhangjiakou, Chengde, Shijiazhuang, Baoding, Langfang,
and Tangshan.
The emergency plan would be terminated after relevant
authorities confirm that air quality in the coming
two days could meet official standards.
Cleaner air has been Beijing's major concern with
the Games pending. The city has been relocating the
Shougang Group, one of China's leading steel makers
and the city's major polluter, taken half of the city's
3.3 million vehicles off the roads, halted most construction,
built more waste treatment facilities and utilized
more geothermal resources.
Beijing's neighboring municipality Tianjin and the
nearby provinces of Hebei, Shanxi and Shandong, plus
the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, are also helping
the capital to attain its anti-pollution goals by
closing major polluters, removing high-emission cars
from the roads and restoring grassland vegetation.
Experts have previously claimed that major air pollutants,
such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and particulate
matter from vehicles have dropped by 20 percent in
Beijing year-on-year, thanks to the factory and vehicle
use restrictions for the Olympics.
But some Beijing residents and visitors still complained
that the city is still covered by mist and fog, despite
the fact that the city recorded more "blue sky"
days so far compared with the same period last year.
Du Shaozhong, vice director of Beijing Municipal
Environmental Protection Bureau, said earlier this
week that the rare lack of rain and wind to blow away
accumulated emissions was partly to blame, but was
optimistic that Beijing's air quality will improve
as weather changes.