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BEIJING, Feb. 21 -- If you are a business owner or office manager in one of those new steel-and-glass towers on the Bund in Shanghai or the Central Business District in Beijing and notice an increase in sick days or a lack of concentration among your staff, don't just blame their laziness.
The fact is, in China or any other country with many
new buildings, the competitiveness of business operations is being eroded by
indoor air pollution.
The smell and chemical elements emitted from
construction materials that are only half-dry or new furniture and office
equipment may cause serious problems. At worst, staff can die, or they can
subject an employer to unexpected liabilities.
One prime example is Vivien Cui, a 25-year-old
professional working with an international company in Beijing's Central Business
District. Shortly after she started work two years ago, she developed a rash on
her face. During the next year, the symptoms became worse as the rash covered
her whole face.
After consulting an American dermatologist, Cui
learnt that her problem was a result of poisonous elements in the office air, a
condition doctors call "bad office air syndrome."
Only then did it dawn on her why some of her
colleagues had also grumbled about headaches, others were easily susceptible to
flu or colds, and several had eye problems such as conjunctivitis.
"I was close to desperate at that time; you know, for
a woman my age, a 'face problem' is a big deal," said Cui, requesting that her
company and the building not be named as she still works there.
Cui is certainly not alone in suffering bad office
air, which is a major factor in the health of present-day society. Although
there are no national statistics about how bad indoor air quality in offices is,
existing data and cases indicate a grave picture.
The China National Interior Decoration Association
(CNIDA) sampled the air in several high-grade office buildings in Beijing last
year, and it turned out 81 per cent of the locations exceeded the safety levels
for ammonia, 50 per cent for ozone and 42 per cent for formaldehyde all
hazardous elements known to cause illnesses such as Legionnaires' disease,
asthma, hypersensitivity pneumonitis and humidifier fever.
In Shenzhen, Guangdong Province - the richest
city in South China - the municipal centre for disease prevention and control
did a similar test last year and found more than 90 per cent of the offices had
excessive air pollutants.
The local environment monitoring station in Wuhan,
capital of Central China's Hubei Province, tested 572 new and remodelled offices
in the past four years. The result was that 89.8 per cent of them were
overloaded with air pollutants, with some offices having 18 times more ammonia
than the established maximum.
"If you scan every office building against the
official indoor air quality standard, you can rarely find one that is fully
qualified," said Song Guangsheng, director of CNIDA's Indoor Environment Test
Centre.
Sources of pollution, according to Song, include
construction and decoration materials, furniture, electronic apparatuses and
poor ventilation.
Decoration materials, such as paint and floors, are
known to release pollutants that contain formaldehyde or benzene; therefore,
more and more office occupants choose to use "green materials" with a pollutant
emission significantly lower than the acknowledged dangerous level. But having
everything "green" in the office does not guarantee safe indoor air quality.
"By 'green,' it means that the pollutant release of
any given material is within the safety scope prescribed by the authorities, but
there are often so many materials used in one office room. The amount of
pollutants can still add up to be hazardous," Song said.
A common practice used by many companies today is to
divide a large room into dozens of small cubicles. But the material - usually
with compound boards - used in the dividers can release a daunting amount of
pollutants, Song said.
And the senior executives in their offices are no
safer, he said, because the furniture in their heavily decorated rooms might be
denser, not to mention the leather sofas and carpets that often generate
volatile organic compounds.
"And the electronic devices," Song added. "Things
such as computer screens and Xerox machines gather dust and generate ozone."
In a sense, the polluting environment in offices is
unavoidable. A good ventilation system can help, or staff can suffer much more
if it's bad.
"Sadly, the ventilation systems in many offices are
not as good as the building's exterior," said Zhang Qi, an indoor environmental
expert with the China Association for Science and Technology.
For all the dazzling glass walls in buildings where
some offices operate, there are no windows to open, Zhang said, and their
central air conditioner-based ventilation systems cannot provide adequate
ventilation with outdoor air.
Worse, some air conditioning pipes may become a
hotbed of dirt and bacteria because of insufficient ventilation and lack of
cleaning, he said.
Many building owners seem to be unaware or are
purposely silent on the indoor air quality issue. According to Song of CNIDA,
most of those who requested testing were office tenants or individual employees,
and few building managers have taken the initiative to address this problem.
That is the part that bothers Cui most. "The property
management is very lazy," she said. "The doctor said I should keep the window
open because only fresh air can help relieve the syndrome, while the property
management kept saying, 'It is too windy today, not suitable for opening the
window' or 'it is too dusty today; it will make the office dirty.'
"They just resorted to all kinds of excuses not to
open the window, and they are the only ones who have the key to the window. In
level-A office buildings, staff working here are not allowed to open windows
ourselves."
China Daily approached the property management of
several level-A buildings in downtown Beijing, but they all declined to comment.
Disputes over office air quality are on the rise in
recent years. In some cases, employees have sued their bosses for provided an
unhealthful work environment; in other cases, building management and furniture
makers have been sued for using unhealthful decorations and furniture materials.
The Beijing Consumers' Association alone received 594
complaints regarding indoor air quality in the first half of 2005, a 10 per cent
increase year-on-year.
A latest lawsuit over office air pollution is under
way in Xiamen, Fujian Province. A woman working with a local apparatus company
sued the company and three other firms providing interior decoration and
furniture, claiming that the lung disease she contracted was the result of
excessive formaldehyde in the office air.
At the end of November, the district court in Xiamen
ordered the four companies to pay the woman a total of 240,000 yuan (US$30,000)
in compensation.
Health effects from indoor air pollutants may be
experienced soon after exposure or years later, according to Gao Jian, director
of the International Department of the China-Japan Friendship Hospital in
Beijing.
Immediate effects may show up after a single exposure
or repeated exposures. They include irritation of the eyes, nose and throat,
headaches, dizziness and fatigue. Symptoms of some diseases, including asthma,
hypersensitivity pneumonitis, and humidifier fever, may also show up soon after
exposure to some indoor air pollutants, Gao said.
Immediate effects are usually short-term and
treatable. Sometimes the answer is simply moving the person away from the source
of the pollution if it can be identified, he said.
Other solutions to indoor air problems include better
ventilation, using purifying devices and materials, and houseplants, which can
improve the oxygen-carbon dioxide exchange and humidity and make working indoors
more tolerable, Gao added.
Cui's suffering ended with the purchase of two air
purifiers for about 7,000 yuan (US$875), and more plants were placed in the
company's 150-square-metre office. The result: Her face is clear again.
"It feels much better now as we finally got a
solution," she said. "If we can't change the world, we change the niche."
(China Daily
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