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China’s massive ‘pollution cloud’ can be seen from space

By | January 17, 2012, 6:00 AM PST

The thick, heavily-polluted air that hangs ominously over many of its residents has long been a real nuisance.

On the ground floor, its a curtain of smog so ubiquitous that highways were forced to close and outdoor school activities cancelled. One of the most disruptive instances took place on the morning of January 10 2012 when the Beijing airport was forced to cancel 43 flights and delay an additional 80 more due to bad visibility. To blame was a stretch of fog and haze that was so massive and gritty NASA satellite photos show it completely blanketing Beijing along with a large swatch of the surrounding region.

Yet amazingly, according to data released by the Chinese government, Beijing saw more than 250 “blue sky days” annually for the past two years. If something doesn’t seem to add up, there’s a reason: Air quality readings in many of the major cities gauge the severity of given conditions based on the presence of tiny particles that measure up to 10 microns in diameter.

The problem with this standard is that most of the pollution that makes up haze isn’t PM10; it’s finer particles, smaller than 2.5 micrometers in diameter (PM2.5). These particles can embed themselves deep in the lungs and occasionally enter the blood stream. The fine particles are highly reflective, sending sunlight back into space. While the Chinese government doesn’t measure PM2.5, the U.S. Embassy in Beijing reports their measurements hourly in a Twitter feed. And on the morning of January 10, PM2.5 measurements indicated that the skies were anything but blue, though by afternoon they had dropped to moderate levels.

Though China has blocked Twitter, the public outcry for official assessments based on readings of PM2.5 has only gotten louder. In response, the Beijing Environmental Bureau announced plans to start releasing PM2.5 measurements before January 23, the Chinese New Year.

“With amazing speed, this term of technical jargon, PM 2.5, became a household word,” Ma Jun, of China’s Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs told the Economist. People understood the huge impact on health, he says, and their fuss helped overcome the barriers to transparency.

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Tuan C. Nguyen

About Tuan C. Nguyen

Tuan C. Nguyen was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2011 to 2013.

Tuan C. Nguyen

Tuan C. Nguyen

Contributing Editor

Tuan C. Nguyen is a freelance science journalist based in New York City. He has written for the U.S. News and World Report, Fox News, MSNBC, ABC News, AOL, Yahoo! News and LiveScience. Formerly, he was reporter and producer for the technology section of ABCNews.com. He holds degrees from the University of California Los Angeles and the City University of New York's Graduate School of Journalism.

Follow him on Twitter.

Tuan C. Nguyen

Tuan C. Nguyen

Tuan C. Nguyen does not hold any investments in the technology companies he covers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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China's Pollution Cloud
Good thing that China was exempted from the Kyoto clean air accords...
Posted by bb_apptix
17th Jan 2012
-1 Votes
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Yeah...
and good thing China is in another planet... You heard about the garbage stream in the oceans? Man, that's incredible what humans are doing to Earth... But naturally, that 'global warming' thing is leftist speeches and 'real' scientists should not worry about that...
Posted by FuzzyIce
17th Jan 2012
+2 Votes
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Break
Oh please, give us a break! You can see a smog 'cloud' over most American cities every day. Just fly into any large city in North America, and you have to pass through a brown fog.
Posted by 16Tons
17th Jan 2012
-1 Votes
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So?
Does that make this OK? Do you have a clue how big this area is?

This seen from space, China's Great Wall cannot be seen from space.
Posted by shaunehunter
17th Jan 2012
+3 Votes
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it would be a matter of magnitude
when I've flown, which isn't that often I admit, there hasn't been a brown fog. However, Bejing's goes way beyond the slight brown tint that you can see through that you may have once seen. This was so bad that flights were cancelled due to lack of visibility, caused solely by the huge amount of human generated pm 2.5 particles, that cause real damage when inhaled. Even in the past, when US air pollution was at it's worst, it was a haze, never a hundreds of miles in size, blocking the view from space, and grounding planes because the pilots can't see the runway, all while denied by the government disaster in waiting.
Posted by kevinrs1
18th Jan 2012
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