Smog in northern China shuts highways, causes cancelled flights

Large parts of the north were hit by hazardous smog in mid-December, leading authorities to order hundreds of factories to close and to restrict motorists to cut emissions.

Beijing: Heavy smog in northern China on Sunday caused hundreds of flights to be cancelled and highways to shut, disrupting the first day of the New Year holiday.

Large parts of the north were hit by hazardous smog in mid-December, leading authorities to order hundreds of factories to close and to restrict motorists to cut emissions.

The latest bout of air pollution began on Friday and is expected to persist until Thursday, although it will ease slightly on Monday, the last day of the New Year holiday.

In Beijing, 126 flights were cancelled at the city`s main airport and all buses from there to neighbouring cities suspended, state news agency Xinhua said.

Average concentrations of small breathable particles known as PM2.5 were higher than 500 micrograms per cubic metre in Beijing - 50 times higher than World Health Organization recommendations.

In Tianjin, Beijing`s next door metropolis, the smog was not as serious but visibility much worse, with more than 300 flights cancelled at Tianjin airport and conditions not expected to improve in the near term, the city government said.

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