Poster's note: obliquely interesting to geoengineers; and notable as it
could potentially reduce cooling side-effects from aerosol haze, if rolled
out at scale.

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/02/china-has-built-the-world-s-largest-air-purifier-to-battle-smog/

China has built the ‘world’s largest air purifier’ to battle smog
China has created a giant air purifier in order to combat the amount of
smog in the city of Xian. Image: REUTERS/Stringer

Rob Smith <https://www.weforum.org/agenda/authors/rob-smith>, Formative
Content
------------------------------

Scientists at China’s Institute of Earth Environment have constructed what
they say is the world’s largest air purifier in the northern city of Xian.

The experimental smog-sucking tower stands at over 100 metres tall and is
designed to improve air quality in the city, where standards regularly fall
short of expectations set by the World Health Organization.
Smog-sucking tower under construction. Image: South China Morning Post

The tower has already brought a noticeable improvement in air quality
across an area of 10 square kilometres, according to a report
<http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2128355/china-builds-worlds-biggest-air-purifier-and-it-seems-be-working>
in
the South China Morning Post.

Lead researcher Cao Junji says the tower is capable of producing more than
10 million cubic metres of clean air per day, adding that on severely
polluted days smog is reduced to “moderate levels”.
Image: South China Morning Post

To monitor the tower’s impact, Junji’s team placed pollution monitoring
stations in the surrounding area, discovering that levels of PM2.5 — the
fine particles in smog considered most harmful — fell 15% during times of
heavy pollution, compared to average.

How it works

The system comprises a series of specially-adapted greenhouses situated at
the base of the tower, which suck in polluted air and heat it using solar
energy.

The air then rises through layers of cleaning filters before being released
into the atmosphere. A full assessment of the tower’s performance is
expected later this year, with the researchers hoping to build a
fully-functioning tower around five times larger thereafter.

The Xian tower experiment is similar to the Smog Free Project
<https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/06/why-turning-smog-into-diamonds-isn-t-as-crazy-as-it-sounds/>,
created by Dutch artist Daan Roosegaarde in 2016 as a means of purifying
Beijing’s air.

That project consists of two parts. First, a seven-metre-tall tower sucks
up polluted air, and cleans it at a nano-level. Second, the carbon from
smog particles is turned into diamonds.
The Smog Free Project, Beijing. Image: Studioroosegaarde.net

More smog towers are being produced for parks and playgrounds across
China’s cities. Roosegaarde says air in these areas will be 70–75% cleaner
than the rest of the city.

Clean future

This is particularly good news for a country that has notoriously high
levels of air pollution.
<https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/10/china-declared-war-on-pollution-is-it-winning/>

China’s share of the global emissions mix jumped from 5.7% in 1973 to 28.1%
in 2016. This is due largely to its unrivalled appetite for coal.

According to the latest Key World Energy Statistics report
<http://www.iea.org/publications/freepublications/publication/KeyWorld2017.pdf>
by
the International Energy Agency, China was the world’s largest producer and
importer of coal in 2016.

And while China was not among the 20 countries that agreed to phase out
coal by 2030 at last year’s COP23 climate talks, it is attempting to reduce
its carbon footprint.

For example, China recently announced it would scrap plans to build 85
coal-fired plants.

And last year the country introduced anti-pollution measures across 28
cities. The plan, which includes curbing production in heavy industries, is
designed to cut PM2.5 concentrations by at least 15% year-on-year.

China has also increased its investment in clean energy, from $7.5 billion
in 2005 to more than $101 billion a decade later. This is in addition to
investing $44 billion in overseas clean energy projects last year,
according to the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.
<http://ieefa.org/ieefa-report-china-continues-position-global-clean-energy-dominance-2017/>

In comparison, the European Union invested $39.9 billion in clean energy in
2015.

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