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China’s polluted capital may be scaling back its smog clean-up

Acting mayor Cai Qi has cut city’s 2020 targets for reducing toxic particulates, suggesting that 2022 goals will not be met

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The Forbidden City is shrouded in the heavy air pollution in Beijing in early November. Photo: AFP

China’s smog-laden capital may be quietly scaling back its clean-up ambitions, now that the city looks set to miss its 2017 target for lowering levels of harmful particulate pollutants known as PM2.5.

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Instead, the municipal government, under its newly appointed acting mayor, Cai Qi, approved a more moderate 2020 target last week for reducing the smog-inducing pollutants.

Weather authorities have forecast that from Tuesday, Beijing will once again be shrouded in smog, this time until Friday.

In 2013, amid mounting public concern and a widely lauded national campaign to tackle smog, the State Council – China’s cabinet – set clean-up targets to be achieved by 2017 for three major urban clusters, namely the Beijing-Hebei-Tianjin area, and the Yangtze and Pearl River Deltas.

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