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Where's our airport ? - China's Extreme Smog Forces Pilots to Train for Blind Landings

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Scientists in South Korea say the country must brace itself for a bank of smog rolling in across the sea from China, it's reported.

The National Institute of Environmental Research says westerly winds are bearing a cloud laden with high levels of heavy metals such as arsenic and lead. They expect the whole country to be enveloped in whatChoson Ilbo newspaper called the "new influx of toxic haze" that blanketed the western island of Baengnyeong at the weekend and went on to obscure the skyline of the capital Seoul.

Researcher Ahn Joon-young says cold weather has promoted a rise in coal-burning to heat homes in China, and expects the haze to become a more frequent problem for Korea. Warnings of the smog have sent sales of face masks soaring six-fold, along with detergents that claim to wash away bacteria and heavy metals. Dustproof windshield wipers and air filters are popular.

SOURCE: BBC News - South Korea in a daze over Chinese haze
 
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Take a flight in China, and there’s a decent chance your flight will be delayed. The nation’s notoriously congested airports are dealing this month with the onset of a particularly extreme bout of lung-choking pollution, which lowers visibility and contributes to airline troubles.

In response, Chinese authorities have mandated that pilots at domestic airlines who fly into the 10 most congested airports be qualified to land when visibility falls below 400 meters (1,300 feet), Bloomberg News reported today, citing the Civil Aviation Administration of China. Currently, domestic flights are diverted whenvisibility falls below 400 meters. Under the new rule, pilots will need to be rated to land airplanes using the precision auto-landing instruments on most Airbus(EAD:FP) and Boeing (BA) models. Those trickier airport approaches, using radio waves, are the same type that were discussed for bad weather when U.S. regulators decided recently to allow wireless devices in flight. Passengers must still power down their gadgets when the pilot says so.

Chinese officials are aiming to curb flight delays at Beijing Capital and Shanghai Pudong airports, which are marred by two of the world’s worst records for on-time flights. Bloomberg reported that in October, Beijing and Shanghai had on-time departure rates of 38 percent and 39 percent, respectively, the worst among 35 major international airports, according to FlightStats.

The rules apply only to China’s domestic pilots and won’t affect training for U.S. aviators. A spokeswoman for United (UAL), the U.S. airline with the most service to China, says its operations have not been affected by pollution. A FedEx(FDX) spokesman said Friday it has been “business as usual” for its China flights.American (AAL) and Delta (DAL) had no immediate comment.

The kind of low-visibility approach mandated in China has become common for many U.S. carriers, particularly Alaska Airlines (ALK), which has pioneered such landings in Alaska, where fog and rain are frequent. The company says such equipment and pilot training save it about $15 million annually, because cancellations and diversions on flights to Alaskan airports have been reduced. (Here’s an FAA video of the precision approach into Juneau, which, to be clear, is a more sophisticated variety than the instrument approaches required in China starting Jan. 1.) OP NOTE: Video in SOURCE link

The technology allows airplanes to follow a precise path even when pilots can’t see much, says Sean Cassidy, an Alaska Airlines captain and national safety coordinator for the Air Line Pilots Association, the largest U.S. pilot union. “Basically you’re monitoring the airplane all the way to when it touches down, and you take over when the airplane starts to slow down on the runway,” he says.

China is plagued with severe pollution made worse in winter due to a heavy reliance on coal-fired power plants to heat homes. The nation also has massive industrial factories that contribute smog to the atmosphere and tens of millions of drivers, leading to frequent congestion on freeways.

Cassidy, a former military pilot who flew in China, says the worst travel-related impact of the country’s air pollution isn’t on U.S. airline operations but on their crews who fly there. “Just because of the air quality, walking, breathing, and trying to exercise—all the things you do on a normal layover—that’s when it becomes hard,” he says.

SOURCE:China's Extreme Smog Forces Pilots to Train for Blind Landings - Businessweek
 
I hope China create more smog and pollution so that their southern neighbor will be affected also
 
China tells pilots: learn to land in smog | World news | theguardian.com

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Chinese authorities have told pilots who fly to Beijing they must be qualified to land their aircraft in the low visibility bought about by smog – the latest missive related to the capital's heavy air pollution, which the government this week lauded as a beneficial shield against missile attacks.

From 1 January pilots flying from the country's 10 busiest airports into the Chinese capital must be qualified to use an instrument landing system on days when smog reduces visibility to around 400 metres (1,315 feet), the official China Daily said, citing China's civil aviation regulator.

"It is part of a series of measures the administration took recently to raise the flights' on-time performance," the newspaper quoted an unnamed aviation official as saying.

Despite investing billions of dollars in new airports and advanced western-built aircraft China suffers a chronic problem with flight delays, partly because of its often wildly fluctuating weather but also because the military tightly controls most of China's airspace.

Chinese media frequently reports fights, attacks on airport and airline workers and passengers storming aircraft in response to delays and the poor way they are handled. The government has demanded airlines and airports address the issue.

In recent years smog has added to the delays, especially in Beijing but also in other parts of the country like Shanghai.

"Considering the recent smog and haze has bought numerous troubles to air transport in eastern and southern regions, it seems necessary for authorities to ask pilots to improve their landing capability in low visibility," the China Daily quoted Ouyang Jie, a professor at Civil Aviation University of China, as saying.

The report added that only a handful of Chinese airports have the instrument landing systems required for aircraft to land in poor visibility.

Air quality in cities is of increasing concern to China's stability-obsessed leaders, anxious to douse potential unrest as a more affluent urban population turns against a driver for economic growth that has poisoned much of the country's air, water and soil.

China's state media came under fire this week for arguing the smog had benefits: it could hinder the use of guided missiles by enemies as well as helping Chinese people's sense of humour by causing a proliferation of smog jokes.
 
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(Reuters) - Hazardous air pollution forced schools to shut or suspend outdoor activities in at least two cities in eastern China, where residents complained of the yellow skies and foul smells that are symptomatic of the country's crippling smog crisis.

China's stability-obsessed leadership has become increasingly concerned by the abysmal air quality in cities, as it plays into popular resentment over political privilege and rising inequality in the world's second-largest economy.

In Nanjing, the capital of Jiangsu Province, the sun was the color of "salted egg yolk" on Wednesday as the government raised the "red alert" for poor air quality for the first time, state-run news media reported.

The city saw levels of PM2.5, or particulate matter with a diameter of 2.5 micrometers, reach a reading of 354 on Wednesday, said Nanjing-based news portal news.longhoo.net.

Levels above 300 are considered hazardous, while the World Health Organization recommends a daily level of no more than 20.

Qingdao, a coastal city in Shandong province, was also shrouded in smog as PM2.5 levels of over 300 were recorded, said Peninsula Metropolis Daily, a Qingdao newspaper.

Nanjing suspended classes in primary and secondary schools and Qingdao banned outdoor activities, said the official Xinhua news agency. Qingdao also banned the burning of leaves and rubbish and restricted the use of government vehicles, while Nanjing said it would strengthen control on industrial sources of pollutants.

Both cities predicted the severe pollution would continue, indicating the measures will not be lifted soon, said Xinhua.

Residents in both cities took to China's popular Twitter-like Weibo site to describe desolate streets and the apocalyptic environment. "The sky is pale yellow and the air is full of a choking smell," one user wrote.

The smog follows reports in October of pollution all but shutting down Harbin, one of northeastern China's largest cities. Visibility was reportedly reduced to 10 meters (33 feet).

SOURCE: Schools close in smog-enshrouded eastern China| Reuters
 
This is the result of the mad rush of the CPC to try and become a supah powah, relegating everything else in the process!
 
VN welcomes tourists who want to enjoy fresh air in the jungle or on the beach :-)

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Vietnam and Thailand are on the list on the second half of this year hopefully .

Fingers Crossed .
 
Vietnam and Thailand are on the list on the second half of this year hopefully .

Fingers Crossed .
Thailand is ahead of VN tourism infrastructures, hence more number of tourists. VN is a late comer, but offers more healthy nature. Thailand nature is decaying.
 
VN welcomes tourists who want to enjoy fresh air in the jungle or on the beach :-)

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This is Vietnam :agree:

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Can Vietnam people Drink This Water?
I am Impressed with Viet People, If They can. :coffee:


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River in Vietnam, picture taken September 15, 2009


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Vietnam Sewerage in Binh Duong. Very Clean :D

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As you can see here you cant even see the bottom of the river. :hang3:

But, In Indonesia

We Welcome all Tourist, to enjoy in Indonesia :yahoo:

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Beautiful Sea at Gili Meno-Indonesia.

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Even in our Big City :woot:


Come and Visit Indonesia This Year :cheers:
 
This is Vietnam :agree:

View attachment 12844
Can Vietnam people Drink This Water?
I am Impressed with Viet People, If They can. :coffee:


View attachment 12845
River in Vietnam, picture taken September 15, 2009


View attachment 12846
Vietnam Sewerage in Binh Duong. Very Clean :D

View attachment 12847
As you can see here you cant even see the bottom of the river. :hang3:
the pictures were taken in 2009. Since then things have improved. Sure, you are right. There is a still a long way to go. Industrial waste is the major concern.
How Ho Chi Minh City’s Filthy Canal Became a Park - Bloomberg

You post an old image from Bing Duong. In a few years it should be like this when completed.

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In this regard I am really pissed off at those northerners. They bitch about smog but heat their homes like hell with all those coal burning. We living in Yangtze River dealt a have freezing winter but chose not to burn coals for heating and instead uses AC. Those smogs blew from north to shanghai and my province last month.

People are such hypocrites. Every winter we have to pray that no big wind blows smog from north.
 
I hope China create more smog and pollution so that their southern neighbor will be affected also

There is the Himalayas in between. Also the wind patterns will not permit that. Your wishes will remain unfulfilled. And the Chinese people's torment will just continue.
 

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