Jump to content

Battle against forest fires continues as pollution levels rise


Recommended Posts

Posted

Battle against forest fires continues as pollution levels rise

By The Nation

 

4ce616033749134280460e0888d5159a-sld.jpeg

Wiang Haeng district ,Chiang Mai

 

Residents in many parts of the upper northern Thailand continued to suffer dangerous levels of air pollution on Thursday, while officials and volunteers battled forest fires.

 

The Geo-Informatics and Space Technology Development Agency's fire monitoring system, as of 2.42am, cited 275 hot spots in the region. The top five worst provinces were Mae Hong Son (114 hot spots), Chiang Mai (35), Lampang (35), Chiang Rai (33), and Phayao (20).

 

Air quality remained poor in Chiang Mai – which ranked second with an air quality index (AQI) of 280 in the airvisual.com ranking of the world's worst polluted cities as of 1pm – after China's Shenyang that cited an AQI of 1,505.

 

Chiang Mai officials fought multiple forest fires in Samoeng district with the latest one extinguished on Wednesday evening, damaging 100 rais, while Ban Laowu firefighters in Wiang Haeng district called for back-up to fight an extensive blaze there. 

 

Multiple fires on Doi Luang Chiang Dao in Chiang Dao district were all out while officials still had to inspect damage to rare plants and protected wildlife animals there.

 

In Phayao, there was 85 micrograms of PM2.5 – airborne particulates 2.5 microns or less in diameter – per cubic meter of air and an AQI of 187 – both figures of which were beyond Thai safety limits of 50 mcg in PM2.5 and of 100 in AQI. 

 

Soldiers from the 34th Military Circle joined Mae Puem National Park officials and community volunteers to fight multiple forest fires including one in a conserved forestland in Tambon Ban Sang of Muang Phayao that was put out on Wednesday after it destroyed 50 rais of forest land.

 

In Mae Hong Son with a PM2.5 level of 160 mcg at 8am, firefighters continued to battle flames especially in the hard-hit Pang Mapha district.

 

During Wednesday's meeting of all district chiefs to brainstorm solutions to forest fires and haze, governor Sirirat Chamupakarn called for a total ban on all outdoor burning, a full effort to put out forest fires, an investigation to find the person who created the fire, a fact-finding committee to probe the fire that cannot pinpoint the culprit, and the establishment of a tambon-level task force. 

 

After that meeting, each district called its own meeting to pass on the policy while many village headmen noted that some forest fire incidents, especially in Pang Mapha, may be politically motivated, as some people have conflicts with some kamnans or village headmen and may want to remove their rivals from posts. 

 

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha earlier this week said that kamnans or village headmen who failed to curb forest fires and haze, may be fired.

Meanwhile, the Pollution Control Department (PCD) at 9am, put the 24-hour average of PM2.5 between 38mcg and 151mcg in nine northern provinces. 

 

Tambon Jong Kham in Muang Mae Hong Son was worst off at 151 mcg followed by Tambon Wiang Phang Kham in Chiang Rai's Mae Sai district (121 mcg) and Tambon Chang Pheuk in Muang Chiang Mai (118 mcg). Chiang Mai's other three stations also cited high levels; Sri Phum and Suthep in Muang cited 110 mcg and 78 mcg while Chang Kerng in Mae Chaem cited 84 mcg.

 

The Chiang Mai Air Quality Health Index Center's website (cmaqhi.org) at 9am showed the hourly result of PM2.5 to be dangerously high in various surrounding districts with Tambon Yang Mern of Samoeng district being the worst off at 461 mcg followed by Tambon Mae Pong in Doi Saket district at 425 mcg.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30367143

 

thenation_logo.jpg

-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-04-04

Posted
16 minutes ago, snoop1130 said:

governor Sirirat Chamupakarn called for a total ban on all outdoor burning, a full effort to put out forest fires, an investigation to find the person who created the fire, a fact-finding committee to probe the fire that cannot pinpoint the culprit, and the establishment of a tambon-level task force. 

Good. Finally a plan that makes a lot of sense. Not clear whether anyone liked this idea though.

 

Posted
5 minutes ago, fruitman said:

It's becoming a national disaster!

NO IT IS NOT! ( I consider this an inflammatory post!:whistling:)

 

Most of the forest has been cut down in the last 100 years, last 70 years. There is not much left to burn.

 

50 Rai of forest burned? I've got friends with 10 rai plots and that is just one house. So 5 gardens burned.

 

 

  • Haha 1
Posted
16 hours ago, madmitch said:

I'm not quite sure where you have got your information from but have a look at the quote from the article.

And that's just one fire. There are dozens burning out there.

I guess he put all his money in a hotel in the area.....

Posted

I am confused.

He calls on a total outdoor burn, but I thought this burning ban is already in place.

He can ban as much as he wants, people will not care.

  • Like 1
Posted

You are right people won't care, but the interesting thing is he wants to put some teeth in it and get more serious: "a full effort to put out forest fires, an investigation to find the person who created the fire, a fact-finding committee to probe the fire that cannot pinpoint the culprit, and the establishment of a tambon-level task force."

 

So not only does it say it all burning stops but also that they will find you and bring you to justice. That would be a dream come true.

 

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...