Beijing issues 1st smog red alert, urging schools to close

A woman wearing a mask to protect herself from pollutants walks past office buildings shrouded with pollution haze in Beijing, Monday, Dec. 7, 2015. Smog shrouded the capital city Monday after authorities in Beijing issued an orange alert on Saturday. AP Photo/Andy Wong

BEIJING — Beijing has issued its first red alert for smog, urging schools to close and invoking restrictions on factories and traffic that will keep half the city's vehicles off the roads.

The red alert — the most serious warning on a four-tier system adopted in recent years — was announced late Monday. It means authorities have forecast more than three consecutive days of severe smog.

Readings of PM2.5 particles climbed toward 300 micrograms per cubic meter, compared with the World Health Organization's safe level of 25. The heavy smog isn't expected to improve until Thursday.

It's the second time this month that notoriously polluted Beijing has experienced a prolonged bout of smog. Most of the pollution is blamed on coal-fired power plants, along with vehicle emissions and construction and factory work.

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