Schools have been closed and cars forced off the road as China’s capital issues its first-ever red alert for pollution.
In an unprecedented situation, labelled ‘airpocalypse’ by Greenpeace, Beijing is shrouded by a dangerous smog, with pollution levels more than 25 times more than the safe level.
The World Health Organisation declares a safe level of PM2.5 – harmful microscopic particles that penetrate deep in the lungs – to be 25 micrograms per cubic metre.
But a reading from outside Beijing’s US embassy measures the levels at 634 micrograms per cubic metre, News Limited reports.
PHOTOS: Smog smothers Beijing in city’s first-ever pollution red alert https://t.co/DQwGDzqISH pic.twitter.com/1E3qs5xa3L
— PBS NewsHour (@NewsHour) December 7, 2015
The red alert, which began on Tuesday morning and will last until midday Thursday, is the highest of the country’s four-tiered warning system and is reserved for when severe smog is expected to last more than 72 hours.