Jump to content


Thailand’s smog showdown: Clearing the air with a bold 30% cut


webfact

Recommended Posts

What is required is more cops on the roads, not only on Bkk roads (are there any?) to reduce pollution and whilst you're at it, ensure all motorbike riders are wearing helmets.

 

Will never happen in our lifetime.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The pictures says it all.. too many cars in a overloaded city, many out of date and cause a lot of pollution. Start with driving new EV taxies, busses and forbid parts of the centre forbidden for old cars as in many European cities already is...But talking and doing nothing will never solve this problem

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

59 minutes ago, webfact said:

With a sharp eye on cutting traffic snarls, the PCD’s playbook includes trimming public bus fares, putting vehicles under the microscope, and rolling out work-from-home days in bustling urban hubs.

 

Turning up the heat on fire prevention, the department has drawn a risk map for 14 forest complexes across the northern and northeastern landscapes, with new rules demanding farmers log in with government officials before sparking any flames, said Preeyaporn.

 

 

So this is the key section, the rest is out and out waffle.....I hope and pray there is a lot more being done, but for the sake of brevity it just hasn't been covered here.....so we have.....

 

Cutting traffic snarls .......(that will help in Isaan??).....how?.....ain't going to happen

 

A risk map......? Something to look at whilst they ignore the satellite images showing Thailand 'on fire'.

 

Farmers to call before burning......? They won't, they'll just burn....they have no option.

 

 

....and these are going to cut the AQI by 30%.

 

People usually say I don't know whether to laugh or cry......there's no doubt in my mind.....cry.

 

 

 

 

Edited by Will B Good
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, ikke1959 said:

The pictures says it all.. too many cars in a overloaded city, many out of date and cause a lot of pollution. Start with driving new EV taxies, busses and forbid parts of the centre forbidden for old cars as in many European cities already is...But talking and doing nothing will never solve this problem

getting people out of their cars and onto transit with reduced fares is a good start.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Good luck with that.  I wish they could just keep it at last year's level.  Seems to have gotten worse every year since I've been here.  The numbers don't lie.

 

First 10 ish years here, I really didn't notice it.  Then the 2nd house (Udon Thani), having a 2nd floor, and view of hills in the distance showed me the light.

 

Rainy season, crystal clear, and can see 4 distinct ridges.  Smog season, you wouldn't even know they are there. 

 

Same here now, PKK, and some days, you wouldn't know the hills to the west exist, and only 10 kms away.  Gotten so I can almost tell what the AQI # is, simply by looking toward the headlands of the bay, from back veranda at present house.   They are only 5 kms away.   Clear or blurry ... hmm, better run the air purifiers :coffee1:

 

My only negative about TH ... pollution

 

Edited by KhunLA
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yessir, gonna cut that pollution - I have my own 2.5 micron  meter - this morning at 4 AM in Prawet District of  Bangkok, the reading ws 56 - about 20 points above the WHO recommendation of health air.  I  see more days in BKK polluted than I did while living in CM.  Even if they could stop the polluters here in Thailand, all the surrounding countries burn everything too and even though they are mostly in the same ASEAN group, they have never been able to get any otber country to stop their  pollution either.  Good luck. Sure hope it succeeds and that Thailand can convince their own citizens to stop polluting and then maybe neighbors will heed the call too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

24 minutes ago, CMHomeboy78 said:

1714459756581.thumb.jpg.36bb5cc16054d918150b99881b7bb4ca.jpg

This is where people get it a bit wrong. It ain't all about the burning. Sure burning adds fuel to the fire so to speak and makes things a whole lot worse but this is BKK and it's surrounds today without the annual burning season. 

https://aqicn.org/station/@421450/#/z/10

 

Screenshot (1341).png

Edited by dinsdale
  • Like 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, UWEB said:

Just stop the Farmers burning their Fields and Waste. Sorted.

Add to that locals burning rubbish, tyre shops burning waste after dark, the wife's cooking!

I'm just glad I live away from a large City.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, KhunLA said:

First 10 ish years here, I really didn't notice it.  Then the 2nd house (Udon Thani), having a 2nd floor, and view of hills in the distance showed me the light.

 

Please do not venture up to your 2nd floor during the months beginning in November through to middle of July.

 

Problem solved.

 

  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

All the vow's and waïs will not help....as long as people continue burning their garbage or crops all over, nothing will change. Places like Hua Hin (hin lek fai area) have become worse with burning stench all over every third day. And of course nobody gives a hoot. All the more reason here not to stay in Thailand for more then 60 to 90 days maximum (for those who can).

  • Thumbs Up 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree, an admirable solution but with respect, have you lived for several years in rural Thailand where sugar cane and maize are grown? I have. 

Both crops are subject to burning but for different reasons. Sugar cane is burnt to remove the dry leaves so that when the canes are cut more easily and delivered to the sugar refinery, the price is based on weight - more cane, less leaves more money! With maize (also sweet corn) after the cobs have been harvested, the remaining dead leaves and stubble in the fields are burnt. More convenient.

There is a third source, the burning of mountain forests prior to the wet season, for the growing and collection of mushrooms.

When it comes to "official" intervention with fines to stop the burning, what one must realise is that many national and local government officials, including police, own the farmland and support tenant farmers to harvest the crops. It is okay for Bangkok to suggest massive fines for burning but in reality out in the sticks it will not happen soon, I can assure you. 

I now live in Siem Reap and Cambodia has the same problem. However when the wind is in the right direction, the smoke is blown westwards over the border to Thailand. 

  • Like 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

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