1. Introduction
Among the environmental challenges China is facing now, air pollution is one of the key issues that draw the attention of academic circles [
1,
2,
3,
4]. In order to scientifically measure air quality and better prevent and control air pollution, China has officially launched the Technical Regulation on Ambient Air Quality Index (on trial) (HJ 633-2012) in 2016 [
5].
Air pollution refers to the circumstances where the concentration of certain substances in the atmosphere reaches a certain level that it can harm the ecosystem as well as humans and other species living in it, and threaten the survival of human beings [
6]. Currently, the pollutants that China has covered in regular monitor and air quality evaluation include sulfur dioxide (SO
2), nitrogen dioxide (NO
2),
carbon monoxide (CO), inhalable particles (PM
10 and PM
2.5), and ozone (O
3) [
5,
7]. Above pollutants all cause serious threats to the sustainable development and health of human beings.
According to the two National Standards on Air Quality Measurement published by the Chinese Ministry of Environmental Protection on 29 February 2012—Ambient air quality standards (GB 3095-2012) and Technical Regulation on Ambient Air Quality Index (on trial) (HJ 633-2012)—that became effective on January 1st, 2016, the air quality measurement of China mainly relies on the calculation of AQI (Air Quality Index), with the method of [
5]:
• First, calculate the Individual Air Quality Index of certain pollutant (
):
In equation above, represents the mass concentration of pollutant P; is the higher threshold of pollutant concentration near corresponding to specified IAQI (Individual Air Quality Index) regulated by government policy; is the lower threshold of pollutant concentration near regulated by government; is the corresponding IAQI to ; while is the corresponding IAQI to .
• Then, take the largest number from all
to calculate the
:
Nevertheless, there are some issues to be further discussed in above calculation method:
(1) The final AQI only reflects one pollutant—only the pollutant with the highest
. Although it is further defined in “AQI Technical Specifications (Trial Use)” that “when AQI is above 50, the pollutant with the highest
is the “primary pollutant”; if there are more than one pollutant with the same highest
, then all of such pollutants are classified as “primary pollutants”; all pollutants whose
is above 100 should be classified as “pollutants exceeding limits” [
5]. However, even based on such definitions, we are unable to capture the impact of pollutants other than the one with the highest
on air quality.
(2) As regulated by government, the threshold of pollutant concentration corresponding to specific
is 500 for average
within 24 hours, and 600 for average
in 24 hours [
5]. However, recently in our actual air quality monitoring practice, sometimes the concentration of certain pollutants (such as
) in certain regions reached far higher than the threshold that it went “off the charts” [
8,
9]. Because
in Equation (1) above is subject to the range of (0, 500) and (0, 600), this calculation method cannot reflect the exact AQI.
(3) Given above issues, it is difficult for us to accurately measure and assess the air quality of different cities, not to mention comparing the effect of air pollution control policies across the cities. In current research practice, the assessment and comparison of air quality across provinces and cities is usually simplified to be based on data, which is not helpful in identifying the whole picture of pollutant sources and creates more challenges for the design and evaluation of air pollution control policies.
Hence, this paper has selected 13 cities across the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei (BTH) region—the region with the heaviest air pollution in China and ranking top among the 13 target regions assigned by the government for air pollution control [
10]. Our study has covered the two municipalities directly under the Central Government, Beijing and Tianjin. Meanwhile, since the launch of “Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei Integration Policy” in 2014, the 13 cities in this region have shown stronger synergy in terms of policy design and execution. Therefore, the air pollution conditions as well as the effectiveness of government policy in the BTH region have valuable implications for wider areas of China.
A number of academic studies have also been conducted on the air quality problem in the BTH region. Lang et al. studied the vehicular emissions trends in the BTH region from 1999 to 2010 by the COPERT IV model. They showed that vehicular emissions of CO and VOC (Volatile Organic Compounds) have decreased while emissions of NO
X and PM
10 have kept increasing in Tianjin and Hebei [
11]. Xu et al. studied the health risks caused by SO
2 emissions in the different cities in the BTH region. Using the Community Multi-scale Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling system, they simulated the fate and transport of SO
2 in the BTH region. They discovered that a risk-based approach should be preferred because it will help improve the efficiency in resource utilization [
12]. Zhao et al. collected more than 400 PM
2.5 samples in Beijing, Tianjin, Shijiazhuang, and Chengde over four seasons from 2009 to 2010. They indicated that the characteristics of carbonaceous aerosol pollution were spatially similar and season-dependent in the plain area of the BTH region [
13]. Sheng et al. compared the air quality of the BTH region just before and after Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meetings of 2014. They showed that the APEC emission reduction measures have effectively improved the air quality of the BTH, especially in Beijing [
14]. Miao et al. used the Weather Research and Forecasting Model and the Flexible-particle Dispersion Model to investigate the pollutant transport mechanisms of a haze event in 2011 over the BTH region. They suggested that the penetration by sea-breeze could strengthen the vertical dispersion in BTH and carry the local pollutants to the downstream areas [
15]. Zhou et al. investigated the ammonia emission inventory for the BTH region with the updated source-specific emission factors and the county-level activity data. They found that higher ammonia emission was concentrated in the areas with more rural and agricultural activity of Shijiazhang, Handan, Xingtai, Tangshan and Cangzhou than other cities in BTH [
16]. Han et al. studied the intense air pollution occurred in the BTH region in January 2013. By multisatellite datasets, air sounding and surface meteorological observations, they showed that there was a vertical overlap of fog and aerosol layers during the foggy haze episodes, which would worsen the regional air quality and have notable effects on the radiation balance [
17]. Guo et al. investigated the reduction potentials of PM
10, NO
x, CO and HC under different control policies in the BTH region during 2011–2020. They showed that the emission standards updating policy would achieve a substantial reduction of all the pollutants, while the eliminating high-emission vehicles policy can reduce emissions more effectively in short-term than in long-term, especially in Beijing [
18]. Chen et al. used Voronoi spatial interpolation method to estimate the PM
2.5 concentration in the BTH region. They showed that up to 14,051 deaths and 6574 million yuan loss would be avoided when the PM
2.5 concentration fell by 25% in BTH [
19]. Zhu et al. studied the spatial impacts of foreign direct investment (FDI) on SO
2 emissions in the BTH region by spatial panel data from 2000 to 2013. They found that the increase in FDI inflows would also increase air pollution levels and influence the air quality of surrounding cities [
20]. Wang et al. developed a modified inter-regional and sectoral model to study the embodied emission flows based on the input-output table of the BTH region. They showed that the transfer pattern of the most significant pollutant flow was the same for SO
2, Soot, Dust and NO
x, which accounted for 35.7% to 42.0% of the total embodied emissions of pollutants from Hebei province to Beijing [
21]. Zhang et al. calculated the intended maximum emission levels in the BTH region by modelling the relationship between PM
2.5 concentration and other air pollutant emissions. They indicated that the PM
2.5 concentrations in BTH was influenced by local air pollutant emissions, wind speed, lagged PM
2.5 concentrations, and PM
2.5 concentrations in adjacent cities [
22].
However, none of the above studies considered the combined effects of the six pollutants. In fact, the severity of each pollutant is not all the same in cities in the BTH region (see
Figure 1) [
23].
Therefore, this paper has extended the indicators defined in “AQI Technical Specifications (Trial Use)” (HJ 633-2012). First, we built an indicator system that covers all six main air pollutants and based on the interval analysis method [
24,
25], we further constructed three kinds of heterogeneous information (information with different dimensions, such as interval number, mean value, and variance) as well as calculated the standardization form of each pollutant indicator in order to capture the effect of each pollutant on air quality within our study period. Then we adopted the Collaborative Filtering Backward Cloud Model to obtain the different weights for calculation of air quality assessment score of each city based on air pollutant concentration data of the BTH region from February 2015 to January 2018. Furthermore, we simulated the Background Trend Line of the dynamic change in air quality in absence of air pollution control policies in cities of the BTH region with help of the Back Propagation (BP) Neural Network method in order to quantify the influence of government policy on pollution control of different cities. Last but not least, we proposed tailored policy recommendations for air pollution control.
The structure of this paper is as follows: Part 2 introduced the methodology and data used in this paper. Part 3 illustrated our calculation results and analysis of the effect of air pollution control policies on various cities in BTH region since March 2016. Part 4 provided conclusions and related policy recommendations.
4. Discussion
According to our research method, the larger the evaluation value obtained, the worse was the air quality of the city at that time. Through comparison between the air quality assessment scores simulated by BP Neural Network and the actual air quality scores, we found that the air pollution control policy since March 2016 has shown different effectiveness and impact on cities of the BTH region as below:
(1) Beijing’s air quality scores have shown improvement since August 2016 after the pollution control policy was implemented, but have also experienced fluctuations before April 2017. Beijing has shown success in air pollution control since October 2017, and greatly improved its ranking in air quality among the 13 cities of BTH region from 2017 to 2018. It has even ranked top one for 3 months and ranked among the top three for 8 months in 2017. The air quality of Beijing has improved 55.74% from 0.5057 in March 2016 to 0.2238 in January 2018, and improved 48.82% since the beginning of our study period (February 2015). Behind this remarkable improvement, Beijing has made heavy investment and issued numerous administrative orders with Chinese characteristics.
From 2016 to 2017, Beijing has invested as much as 34.78 billion RMB in air pollution control, which is almost 7 times of its investment in 2013 [
29]. The biggest investment is on “Replacing Coal and Reducing Nitrogen Emission”, i.e., facilitating the energy source change from coal to clean energy and reducing the annual coal consumption of Beijing from 22.7 million tons in 2013 to less than 6 million tons by end of 2017 through administrative orders and equipment upgrade [
30]. One of the administrative orders with Chinese characteristics is from Beijing Construction Committee on September 15th 2017 that all road construction work (including any earthwork and house demolition) and hydraulic engineering projects must suspend from November 15th 2017 to March 15th 2018 (the heating season in Beijing) in order to completely eliminate construction dust [
31]. Only one month after this administrative order (from October 2017 to January 2018), Beijing has achieved the best air quality score during the entire study period.
Beijing has prioritized the policy control on high-emission vehicles by extending its forbidden area. In November 2016, Beijing government has issued its revised “Air Pollution Emergency Plan” which stipulates that on days of Air Pollution Orange Alert and Red Alert, all light-duty gasoline vehicles with National Level I and Level II Emission Standards are forbidden on the road in the whole city [
32]. Since February 15th 2017, Beijing government has further forbidden cars with National Level I and Level II Emission Standards driving in areas within the 5th Ring Road during workdays (whole day) [
33]. By end of 2017, Beijing government has forced the retirement of 2.17 million old motor vehicles, which accounted for 36.12% of its total motor vehicles [
30].
Beijing has implemented more strict elimination policies for polluting companies. The “Production Technology and Equipment Upgrade / Retirement List of Heavy Polluting Industries of Beijing” was officially effective in July 2017, which strictly requires to remove 115 production technologies and 57 production equipment of 11 industries including the steel industry, non-ferrous metals industry, building materials industry, chemical industry, textile printing and dyeing industry, papermaking industry, etc. within a specified time limit and forbids starting or extending any similar projects [
34]. By the end of 2017, Beijing government has cleaned up around 11 thousand heavy pollution companies [
30]. However, it’s worth noticing that a large number of those companies (especially large industrial companies) simply moved from Beijing to a nearby city. The result is moving the pollution sources from Beijing to Hebei province.
(2) As the other municipality directly under the central government in this region, Tianjin has experienced large fluctuations during the study period. Although its air quality has improved by 34.38% after implementation of the pollution control policies, its air quality score has once dropped to the worst level of 0.7321 in April 2017 and gradually improved afterwards. Its air quality score in January 2018 only improved by 2.04% compared to its level in February 2015. According to the inspection result on Tianjin provided by the Environmental Protection Inspectorate sent by the central government in July 2017, the execution as well as effectiveness of Tianjin’s air pollution control policy has large fluctuations with even worse air quality in several periods. With high concentration of heavy and chemical industries in the city and severe structural pollution, Tianjin still initialized or planned to initialize several thermal power projects without regard to the environment, which resulted in a large increase in the concentration of nitrogen dioxide in the atmosphere in 2016, and an increase of PM
2.5 by 27.5% in the first quarter of 2017 [
35]. Although thee Tianjin government has taken a series of remedial measures including longer suspension period than Beijing—from October 2017 to March 2018, all road construction work, hydraulic engineering projects, earthwork, house demolition and cement mixing work are paused in Tianjin’s urban area [
36]. However, the policy has not shown much effectiveness so far.
(3) Baoding and Cangzhou have shown most overall policy effectiveness within the study period with their own characteristics. Although Baoding has achieved an improvement of 23.41% in air quality score in January 2018 compared with that of the beginning period, except for August 2016 and October 2017, its air quality score has been above 0.50 for most of the study period. Cangzhou has shown lower air quality score than other cities in the study period partly due to its geographical location close to the Bohai Sea. However, since October 2017, its air quality score has deteriorated to above 0.5, resulting in an air quality score in January 2018 that has declined by 6.02% compared with that of the beginning period. We have noticed that in June 2017, Cangzhou Bohai New Area planned a “Beijing Enterprise Zone” in order to receive the immigrating companies of non-capital functions from Beijing. By the end of 2017, almost one thousand companies have settled down in this “Beijing Enterprise Zone”, among which there are nearly 800 clothes manufacturing companies [
37].
(4) The air pollution control policy of Handan, Hengshui, Xingtai and Zhangjiakou has shown low effectiveness within the study period with large differences in air quality scores. All these cities have experienced a decline of air quality scores when comparing the last period with the beginning period, except for Hengshui (the score of Handan has declined by 38.68%, that of Zhangjiakou declined by 17.84%, while that of Xingtai declined by 6.98%). We have noticed that these 4 cities have all received large numbers of polluting companies that migrated out of Beijing in the study period. In 2014, Beijing government decided to move its Lingyun Building Materials & Chemical Co.,Ltd. from Beijing to Handan, which was the first central-government-owned enterprise that was forced to migrate out of Beijing during our study period and received its production permit from Handan government in October 2015. Before that, this company emitted 400 thousand tons of carbon dioxide, 9 thousand tons of sulfur dioxide, and 10 thousand tons of dust and fume in Beijing every year [
38]. In addition, as one of the leading textile printing and dyeing companies of Beijing, Victor’s Clothing Company also migrated to Hengshui in 2015, only leaving its head office and design center in Beijing [
39]. All these migrating companies plus the existing polluting companies in these cities such as Handan Iron and Steel Group Company, panel and plate processing companies in Xingtai, chemical plants in Hengshui, and emissions from the growing numbers of motor vehicles in Zhangjiakou in recent years—the various factors have offset the effects of the air pollution control policies.
(5) The air quality score of Langfang, which is located between the two municipalities directly under the central government—Beijing and Tianjin, dropped to the worst level of 0.7345 in August 2016, ranking bottom among the 13 cities in our study scope. However, after that, its air quality score has seen distinct improvement and reached its best level of 0.2227 in January 2018 (improved by 28.55% compared with its beginning level), ranking top among the 13 cities. Located in the ecological conservation area north-west of Beijing, Chengde has kept an outstanding air quality record of under 0.40. We noticed that the air quality score of Chengde first dropped to the worst level during June and October 2017 but then climbed up. Its air quality score has only improved by 7.37% when comparing that of the ending period with the beginning period. This result shows big fluctuations in air quality and policy effectiveness of these 2 cities in our study period and needs further enhancement in the future.
(6) Tangshan’s case is a little special. Although its air quality in January 2018 has improved by 22.37% compared with the beginning of the period, its air quality score has ranked bottom in 9 months across the study period of 36 months, and has showed no sign of improvement until October 2017. In order to understand the reason behind, we must be aware that from 2014 to 2017, Tangshan received the most industries that migrated from Beijing and Tianjin among cities in Hebei province, with total investment of 575.1 billion RMB and 442 projects of investment over 100 million RMB, including large heavy-pollution industrial companies such as Capital Iron and Steel Company and Beijing Coking and Chemical Plant [
40]. The Caofeidian District of Tangshan with large numbers of immigrating companies from Beijing and Tianjin is only one-hour drive from downtown Tangshan [
41]. Therefore, the moving-in of industrial companies has caused huge impact on the air quality of Tangshan. That is why Tangshan government appropriated 66.70 million RMB from its fiscal income and constructed an air quality grid monitoring and decision-making support system with high accuracy for the purpose of air pollution monitoring and control which was officially launched in September 2017. This system has integrated resources from various government departments including the environmental protection department, public security department, housing development department and land department, and installed almost 600 miniaturized and integrated online monitoring devices with international standards in the urban area [
42]. Moreover, Tangshan has put great emphasis on staggering peak production of iron and steel companies. Since November 15th 2017, Tangshan government has demanded that all of its 35 iron and steel companies adopt staggering-peak production [
43]. For example, Tangshan Iron and Steel Co., Ltd. under Hebei Iron and Steel Group has limited its steel production to 477.5 thousand tons of by suspending the operation of blast furnaces [
44], which has greatly helped the improvement of air quality since October 2017.
(7) The air pollution control policy has achieved little effect in Shijiazhuang and Qinhuangdao. The air quality score of Shijiazhuang in January 2018 has deteriorated by 58.60% when compared with that of the beginning period. The possible reasons are: First, the geographic location of Shijiazhuang is very close to the Taihang Mountains, which blocks the wind or air circulation and causes air pollutants to linger above the city, creating difficulty for the clean-up of air pollution [
45]. Moreover, apart from its own polluting industries including the iron and steel industry and cement industry, Shijiazhuang has also received large numbers of polluting industries from Beijing and Tianjin in recent years, including the building materials industry, leather manufacturing industry, pharmaceuticals industry, etc. [
46]. Many of these polluting companies have set their new location to be between Tangshan and Qinhuangdao, which has impacted the air quality of Qinhuangdao and offset the effectiveness of air pollution control policies to some extent [
47].
5. Conclusions
This paper calculated and assessed the air quality of 13 cities of the BTH region from February 2015 to January 2018 based on the extended AQI indicator system. By constructing and standardizing Heterogeneous Information of major pollutant indicators including interval number, mean value, and variance, we depicted the important effect of other relevant features of pollutant indicators beyond single-point data. Based on that, we further calculated the air quality scores of different cities in the BTH region by using the Collaborative Filtering Backward Cloud Model to construct differentiated weights of different indicators. With help of the Back Propagation (BP) Neutral Network, we simulated the effect of the pollution control policies of the Chinese government targeting air pollution since March 2016. Our conclusion is: the pollution control policies have improved the air quality of Beijing by 55.74%, and improved the air quality of Tianjin by 34.38%; while the migration of polluting enterprises from Beijing and Tianjin has caused different changes in air quality in different cities of Hebei province—we saw air quality deterioration by 58.60% and 38.68% in Shijiazhuang and Handan city respectively. Based on findings above, we provided below policy recommendations for air pollution control of the BTH region:
(1) Embrace more market measures than administrative orders in the battle against air pollution. Currently, most of the measures targeting the air pollution in BTH region are administrative orders and penalty. Although these administrative orders and penalty have achieved certain results, these tools are not efficient or sustainable enough and do not match with the requirement under market economy. Therefore, in the future battle against air pollution, apart from improving the accuracy of air quality measurement, we should also design more tax categories for specific pollutant emissions, such as carbon tax, sulfur dioxide tax, and PM
2.5 tax. At the same time, we should convert the current environmental protection fee to corresponding local tax; decrease the production of pollution products by income effect and substitution effect of tax; encourage companies to save energy [
48,
49] and cut emissions in order to solve the issue of pollution [
50,
51].
(2) Improve the compensation system for both economic and environmental loss during industry migration in the BTH region. During the air pollution control campaign of Beijing and Tianjin, large numbers of polluting companies moved to cities in Hebei province, including some heavy pollution companies such as the Capital Iron and Steel Company and Beijing Coking and Chemical Plant that moved to Tangshan, the Lingyun Building Materials & Chemical Co., Ltd. that moved to Handan, Beijing’s No. 1 Machine Tool Plant that moved to Baoding, etc. This impacted the air pollution control work of cities in Hebei province to some extent. Therefore, the BTH region should establish and improve the compensation system for industry migration and industry upgrade in this region. Based on the overall industry plan of this region, the government should be fully aware of the economic development and environmental protection pressure on these destination cities of polluting industries, and offer sufficient compensation in terms of economic development and environmental protection resources in order to realize a fair competition within this region and achieve synergy in regional economic development.
(3) Develop pollution control technologies and continuously improve air quality through technological advancement. On one hand, we should encourage colleges and scientific research institutions in this region to continue working on air pollution control technologies, and enhance the cleansing and control of industrial wastegas and motor vehicle exhaust. On the other hand, we should continuously develop and implement new energy technologies in this region; improve traffic management and green construction in the city; and further reduce pollution by encourage public transportation and other environmentally friendly methods such as walking and cycling.