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Source:China Daily Updated: 2013-9-3
The Beijing municipal government has vowed to slash the capital's consumption of coal bymore than 50 percent over five years based on 2012 levels, according to a clean-air actionplan issued on Monday.
With the plan, local government is aiming to reduce the proportion of coal used within the city'stotal energy mix to below 10 percent. Pollution from coal-fired emissions is a major contributorto Beijing's smog, especially during the winter.
The plan aims to reduce the amount of fine particulate matter to 60 micrograms per cubic meterby 2017, which would be a 25 percent drop from 2012 levels. This requires the capital to slash13 million metric tons of coal consumption over five years.
The municipal government has been cutting down on coal consumption for 14 years, accordingto China Environmental News, which is run by the Environmental Protection Ministry. Within thattime frame, according to the publication, Beijing has slashed 7 million tons from its total coalconsumption.
The plan issued on Monday lists a number of coal-cutting measures, including allocating a coalquota to districts and key users, strengthening the capital's gas and electricity supply andrevising a sulfur concentration standard in coal.
By reducing its coal consumption, the government says it will increase the demand for naturalgas supply to 24 billion cubic meters by 2017, a goal the government said it will meet.
"The supply of natural gas within and outside China is promising since more natural gasreserves have recently been discovered," said Zhou Dadi, vice-chairman of China EnergyResearch Society.
Four gas-based power plants will begin operations in Beijing by 2014. It has been estimatedthat they will cut the use of coal by about 9.2 million tons.
Another measure within the plan calls for replacing low-quality coal usually used in rural andsuburban areas with high-quality coal that is low in sulfur content before the 2016 heatingseason begins.
"These areas use about 4 million tons of coal every year, accounting for less than 20 percentof the city's total consumption. Yet because of the coal's low quality, the sulfur dioxidegenerated amounts to more than 70 percent of the total emissions," said Wang Jian, deputyhead of the pollution prevention and control department of the Environmental ProtectionMinistry.
Wang said all low quality coal will be phased out in 2016.
Beijing is also trying to completely eliminate the use of coal within the Second Ring Road, thecore area of the city, an aim first established in 2001. So far, about 200,000 households hadswitched from coal to electricity by the end of last year. The plan issued on Monday said by theend of 2015, the remaining 65,000 households within the area will begin using electricity fortheir winter heating.