The treatment of Beijing's air pollution needs the cooperation of neighboring areas, experts said on Friday when the city reported a modest improvement in its air quality in 2012.
The report, published by the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau, showed that the sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide and inhalable particle density in the air has decreased 1.5 percent, 5.5 percent and 4.4 percent, respectively, from the previous year.
The emission load of sulfur dioxide, nitric oxide, and ammonia nitrogen has decreased 4.12 percent, 5.75 percent and 3.95 percent compared with 2011, according to the report.
Though Beijing started to monitor PM2.5, or particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns, and release updates since last year, the report did not include the figures for PM2.5 because facilities and methods for measuring PM2.5 are not finalized, said Zhang Dawei, who heads the city's environmental protection monitoring center.
"We have made a great effort in the past several years to improve the air quality, but it still lags behind the standard and people's expectations," said Yu Jianhua, chief of the atmospheric administration office of the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau.
"It's a complicated process to treat the air and it takes a long time. What we can do is insist on trying our best to make an improvement every year," Yu added.
To treat the air pollution, the capital has reduced coal use by 700,000 metric tons and also weeded out 377,000 old vehicles in 2012.
While the improvement is thought to lag behind people's expectations, experts spoke highly of it.
"Air pollution is a complicated problem resulting from both economic and meteorological factors. It has been a great success reduce concentration and emissions so much," said Zhang Yunhui, an associate professor at the Public Health School of Fudan University in Shanghai.
"The government of Beijing has made great efforts," said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs. "They have made great improvements in emission reduction."
But Beijing's effort alone is not enough, Ma said.
Tianjin municipality and Hebei province consume 70 million tons and 200 million tons of coal every year, respectively. Pollutants from Tianjin and Hebei can be brought to Beijing by wind and be kept there because of Beijing's geographical conditions.
"The final treatment of air pollution needs the cooperation of Beijing with neighboring provinces," Ma added.