Polluted Beijing
Everything you’ve heard about Beijing’s horrible air is true. After I arrived, it took ten days before I saw blue sky.
Ten days.
On a typical day you can stare directly at the sun because there’s so much smog in the air.
When I lick my lips while outside (a favorite pastime in the cold, dry weather), they taste like saran wrap.
It seems like Beijing’s terrible air is caused by industrial pollution and car emissions more than anything else. As such, the pollution floats relatively high in the air and is non-abrasive. In contrast, the pollution in Pingyao came mostly from coal smoke and a huge copper smelter. That pollution seemed heavier, hung lower in the air, and was much more aggravating to the ENT tract.
The US Embassy in Beijing posts readings from their air quality monitors at twitter.com/BeijingAir. That link isn’t accessible from China due to censorship of twitter; however, the government’s firewall doesn’t block the site’s RSS feed.
Usually, the feed is depressing:
In all seriousness, this is some scary shit.
Every time I look at this I think, What’s it doing to my lungs?


{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }
You’re a young non-smoker; you can take it.