BEIJING, June 30 (Xinhua) -- Beijing saw 146 "blue
sky days" during the first half of the year, which means the city's residents
breathed in the least amount of pollutant in nine years, an environment official
said Tuesday.
The blue sky days so far this year was 23 days more
than the corresponding period last year and 47 days than the average level in
recent years, said Du Shaozhong, deputy chief of Beijing municipal environmental
protection bureau.
In June, Beijing saw 25 days, or 83.3 percent of the
total, with blue skies, which was the best among the corresponding months since
2000.
Air quality in January, March, April, May and June
this year are all better than corresponding months in the last decade, Du said.
Beijing has a five-grade classification of air
quality: a reading below 50 is "excellent;" from 51 to 100 "fairly good;" 101to
200 "slightly polluted;" 201 to 300 "poor;" and more than 301 "hazardous." Days
with excellent or fairly good air quality are counted as blue sky days.
Environmental protection experts attributed the
improvement of air quality to the reduced emission of pollutants and the after
effect of measures taken during the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.
The amount of pollutants related to vehicle emissions
has not grown so far this year although the city has registered 200,000 more
vehicles, because 55,000 heavy polluting vehicles were phased out.
Sandstorms during spring decreased from last year's
11 to this year's 6, which also benefited Beijing's blue sky
drive.