Was It All Just a Game to You?

Beijing officials consider extending some clean-air measures beyond Olympics 3

Beijing's emergency measures to clear its famously polluted air during the Olympic Games have been largely successful, with the city reportedly experiencing the cleanest summer air it's had for over a decade. But now that the Olympics are over, full-time city residents have been pointing out how pleasant breathable air has been and how nice it would be to have it all the time. In response, Chinese officials, who are still under the international spotlight until the close of this month's Paralympic Games, hinted to the media recently that some clean-air measures may stay in place beyond the games' end. Officials have said that plans to reduce construction-site dust will be sped up, some of the city's most-polluting vehicles could be subject to more regulation, and that heavily polluting companies may be required to address their pollution problems in order to resume post-games operations. However, one of the most successful (and popular) measures to curb the city's pollution will not be continued after the games -- the restriction keeping half of the city's cars from operating each day.

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  1. greenhornet Posted 5:20 am
    25 Aug 2008

    Beijing continuing green measures after OlympicsWill these newly-baptised Greenies also continue their charming pre-Olympic measure of rounding up and sending tens of thousands of stray cats(and cats turned in by owners due to bogus health scares)to death camps to pretty up the streets?

    They deserve to choke.
  2. Delay And Deny's avatar

    Delay And Deny Posted 8:50 am
    25 Aug 2008

    Ear Pollution

    Speaking of pollution, who is responsible for all those bad, warbling Top Ten ballads at the beginning of each and every event.   There seemed to be a limitless amount of bad Sinopop emerging from the provinces.   Made me long for the days when the intellectuals were all sent to the rice paddies to sing "Oh, How I Love to Carry Manure Up the Mountainside for the Chairman".
  3. BlackBear Posted 9:06 am
    25 Aug 2008

    China is going green at the request of its public?How bad is it that a totalitarian government would respond to such a polite (compared to some) public request for clean air when some other democratically elected governments (in theory) can't seem to quite hear the increasingly strident calls for the same from their constituents?

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