How CPPCC proposals change our lives: War against smog
Share - WeChat

Today, clean air seems routine for residents in North China's Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei area. But if you had traveled back a few years ago, you would have seen a rather different scene.
In early 2013, extended heavy smog shrouded the skies of Beijing and its surrounding areas, leaving tens of millions of people choking.
Facing lasting air pollution, Chinese Peasants and Workers Democratic Party, one of China's eight non-communist parties, proposed to form a national-level coordinated network to tackle the problem.
Let's see how the proposal helped initiate a massive campaign against air pollution.
Proofreader: Jocelyn Eikenburg
Script writer: Ma Chi
Host: Li Danqing
Editors: Zhang Chunyan, Wang Jianfen
- Shijiazhuang's China-Europe freight trains surpass last year's total by October
- China's electricity consumption maintains steady growth in September
- Vapor swirls over water in spectacular weather phenomenon at Tianchi Lake
- Chinese institutes launch powerful AI model to find disease-causing gene mutations
- CPC Central Committee to hold news conference on plenary session
- Conference calls for tech innovations to fight weed menace