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Posted on Sustainabilitank.info on July 30th, 2008
by Pincas Jawetz (PJ@SustainabiliTank.com)

Hong Kong Chokes in Pollution as Horses Arrive.

CHINA: July 30, 2008, Reuters.

HONG KONG - Hong Kong choked in a thick, hot blanket of air pollution on Tuesday, July 29, 2008, with the city gearing up to host Olympic equestrian events, prompting one leading riding nation, Germany, to bemoan the less than ideal conditions.

With the first equestrian horses having arrived over the weekend and settling into their stables, the exceptionally smoggy weather threatened embarrassment for Hong Kong which has spent US$150 million building state-of-the-art facilities and been at pains to play down the risk posed from sub-tropical heat and humidity.


On Monday, the city recorded its highest ever air pollution index (API) reading of 202 on a remote island for a brief period, while in Shatin, where the core Olympics events will be held, the level hit 173 with the general public advised to reduce physical exertion and outdoor activities.

The top-ranked German equestrian team which flew all 14 of their Olympics horses to Hong Kong over the weekend said the poor weather conditions in the former British colony weren’t ideal and a far cry from the usual pristine environment of European events.

“I think it’s very difficult for the horses and for the riders too, they have to acclimatise,” said Reinhard Wendt, the chef de mission for the German equestrian team which includes gold medal contenders Isabell Werth and Ludger Beerbaum.

“We can see how the horses and riders feel. But we don’t know if it’s from the heat or the humidity or the dirty air. We are not used to such circumstances, and the feeling is not so good at the moment,” Wendt told Reuters.

Others teams played down the impact.

“We have no concerns,” Dutch chef d’equipe Mariette Sanders told Reuters. “Okay, it was quite hazy yesterday but there were no problems for us.”

At the Shatin equestrian hub, the air pollution index had dropped substantially from the high reading on Monday.

A spokesperson for the Equestrian Company which is organising the equine events said in a statement that “the condition of all the horses was being very carefully monitored and there was no cause for alarm concerning the horses’ welfare”.

The spike in pollution comes amid a bout of unusually hot and fine sub-tropical weather. Concerns over the summer heat and humidity however sparked the earlier pullout the Swiss dressage team.

Despite intensified government efforts to clean up the smog in recent years which have yielded some results, air pollution has remained a serious problem, with the city’s iconic harbour and top tourist destination cloaked in a thick haze this week.

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BEIJING - Beijing authorities said sauna-like weather trapping hazy pollution in the Olympic host city will not last throughout the Games, state media reported on Tuesday, as organisers consider more pollution controls.

The Chinese capital’s skies remained grey on Tuesday morning, but a breeze overnight had scattered some of the sultry haze that has Olympic organisers worried the city’s restrictions on vehicles and industry have not done enough to staunch pollution.
Officials have raised the prospect of more pollution controls, in addition to ones now keeping nearly half of Beijing’s 3.3 million cars off the roads and shutting many factories and plants near the capital.

But Guo Wenli, the director of the Beijing Meteorological Bureau’s climate centre, told the overseas edition of the People’s Daily that historic weather patterns showed that the “sauna” weather conditions of July will not last throughout the Games starting on Aug. 8.

“During the Beijing Olympics, the weather won’t be the worst compared to the same period historically, and there won’t occur the kind of sustained ’sauna fog’ of late,” Guo told the paper.

The Beijing Meteorological Bureau  http://www.bjmb.gov.cn) forecast a light breeze and possible showers on Tuesday, conditions that it said should help lighten the haze.

The city’s chronic pollution, a sometimes acrid mix of construction dust, vehicle exhaust and factory and power plant fumes, has been one of the biggest worries for Games organisers.

Many athletes have delayed arriving in Beijing until the last minute to avoid bad air, and the International Olympic Committee said it may reschedule endurance events such as the marathon to prevent health risks to athletes if pollution is bad.

City pollution monitors said air quality on Monday was Grade II, making it officially a “blue sky day” despite the grey haze, with the main pollutant being particulate matter.

But officials have also flagged additional pollution controls if the air remains too dirty.



Cars in Beijing are already banned from roads on alternate days depending on their licence plate number — odd or even — and many government cars have been ordered off the roads. Taxis, buses and Olympic vehicles are exempt. Around Beijing, heavily polluting factories, such as steel plants, have also been closed.

Hong Kong, host to the Games’ equestrian events, was hit by its worst air pollution ever recorded on Monday amid soaring temperatures, but arriving Canadian team leader Michael Gallagher said he had no concerns.

“We have noticed the haze,” he told the South China Morning Post. “But it’s not black like it is in Beijing.”

Reporting by Chris Buckley and Nick Macfie in Hong Kong.

For more stories visit our multimedia website “Road to Beijing” at http://www.reuters.com/news/sports/2008o…; and see Reuters blog at http://blogs.reuters.com/china)

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