China's first "fresh air index" released
Updated: 2014-03-20 02:54
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
FUZHOU - China's Fujian province on Wednesday began releasing the first ever "fresh air index" to promote eco-tourism, in sharp contrast to air quality indexes which often cause pollution scare.
Compared to existing air quality indexes released by environmental departments which focus on urban air quality, fresh air indexes focus on changes at a single tourist attraction, said Chen Yihui, deputy chief of the provincial tourism bureau, at a press conference on Wednesday.
"Our goal is to have PM2.5 and healthy air measurements speak for themselves to boost eco-tourism," said Chen.
On March 10, China's State Council, the cabinet, approved Fujian to spearhead the country's ecological construction.
Zhu Hua, director of the provincial tourism bureau, said that the indexes apply to 50 local eco-tourism attractions.
Tourists can track updates on the provincial tourism bureau's website, www.fjta.gov.cn, through microblogs, WeChat, fujian.people.com.cn, fj.sina.com.cn or fj.qq.com.
Based on the province's data, Yongtai Yunding Mountain in Fuzhou City and Da'anyuan scenic spot in Mount Wuyi registered 100,000 and 80,000 negative oxygen ions per square centimeter respectively. Negative oxygen ion readings show how healthy the air is.
These figures far exceeded the World Health Organization standard for fresh air, which ranges from 1,000 to 1,500 per square centimeter.
At Yuhua Karst Cave in Jiangle County, the PM 2.5 reading, which measures airborne particles smaller than 2.5 micrometer, was one or close to zero.
Under China's air quality standards, anything up to 75 micrograms per cubic meter is deemed safe for a PM 2.5 reading.
- Virginia on the road to China
- Pianist Yuja Wang plays to a sold-out Lincoln Center
- Men can be good pole dancers
- Fashions of the first ladies
- Pro-Russian forces take over Ukraine's naval HQ
- New US envoy hits ground running
- HK cellist to perform at Carnegie Hall
- Skyscrapers in E China resemble LV check pattern
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Envoys who helped shape Sino-US ties |
Malaysia Airlines plane still missing |
Deputies persevere on winding road to change |
Landing scare grounds homemade planes |
Scientists search for clear answers on smog |
Safeguarding China's sunken riches |
Today's Top News
Michelle Obama starts landmark trip
Australia resumes search for MH370
Despair voiced in hunt for plane
Experts warn as yuan dips further
China talent top worry for US firms
Search for plane yields frustration, heartache
Quality is king in mobile games' race to the top
NYC event spotlights Chinese food
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |