Beijing has shunted 13,000 outdated, polluting taxis onto the
scrapheap since the beginning of 2006 to try and reduce air
pollution, said the local legislature.
The taxis are cheap models with high emission levels, said Liu
Xiaochen, secretary general of the municipal government at the 33rd
session of the Standing Committee of the 12th Beijing Municipal
People's Congress.
They will be replaced by new taxis that meet the Euro-III
emission norm, said Liu.
Some 2,000 outdated buses will also go to the wreckers this year
and 2,760 clean gas-driven buses will go into service.
The city renovated 330 coal-fuelled boilers and replaced 28,000
old taxis and 3,900 diesel-engine buses in 2005.
Automobile emissions containing sulfur dioxide have become a
major factor in urban pollution. Sulfur dioxide emissions increased
by 4.2 percent in the first half of the year over the same period
in 2005.
Statistics show that Beijing has 2.8 million registered motor
vehicles, including 67,000 taxis.
China will introduce new motor vehicle emission standards in
2007 that will cut automobile pollutants by 30 percent, the State
Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) has said.
The new standards match the EU's Euro III standards. A more
stringent standard, equivalent to Euro IV, will come into effect in
2010.
China began enforcing Euro II emission standards nationwide in
September 2003.
Other measures -- including fume desulphurization at three power
stations and increased supervision of flying dust on construction
sites -- will also be implemented next year to combat
pollution.
(Xinhua News Agency December 11, 2006)