Context:
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In the late 2000s, China faced severe air pollution levels comparable to India’s current crisis, with high PM2.5 concentrations causing major health and economic losses.
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Over the past decade, China achieved substantial improvements in air quality through strong political will, institutional accountability, and technological interventions.
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India’s ongoing struggle with air pollution has renewed focus on learning from China’s policy and governance model.
Key Highlights:
China’s Policy Response
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Air pollution became a national political priority in the late 2000s.
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The 11th Five-Year Plan (2006–10) integrated:
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Environmental targets into economic planning
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Mandatory investments in pollution-control technologies
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Introduction of a cadre evaluation system, linking:
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Officials’ promotions to environmental performance
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Accountability with measurable outcomes
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Technology and Infrastructure Push
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Massive investment in:
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Industrial pollution-control equipment
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Closure of highly polluting industries
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Electric mobility promotion:
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Shenzhen electrified 16,000+ buses by 2017, becoming the first city globally to do so
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Shift reduced urban emissions as power generation was located away from cities
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Detailed Insights:
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Drivers of China’s pollution crisis:
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Rapid industrialisation post-1978
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Heavy reliance on coal and manufacturing
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Determinants of success (2023 study):
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Strong political commitment
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Adequate financial resources
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Robust monitoring and accountability mechanisms
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Why China’s model worked:
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Top-down governance ensured uniform enforcement
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Continuous action rather than reactive measures
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India’s current approach:
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Graded Response Action Plan (GRAP) is:
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Limited largely to the NCR
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Reactive, triggered only after pollution breaches thresholds
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Structural challenges in India:
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High household emissions from biomass burning
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Unequal electricity access
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Perception of environmental regulation as a constraint on growth
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Overlapping jurisdictions across Centre, States, and local bodies dilute accountability
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Adaptable lessons for India:
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Integrate air quality goals into official performance assessment
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Shift from episodic responses to long-term planning
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Scale up clean fuels, EVs, and public transport
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Strengthen institutional coordination and enforcement
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
GS Paper 3 – Environment & Ecology
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Air pollution control strategies
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Comparative environmental governance
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Urban environmental challenges
GS Paper 2 – Governance
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Role of political will and accountability
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Centre–State coordination in environmental policy
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Institutional design and policy effectiveness
Prelims Focus
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PM2.5 and health impacts
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GRAP features
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Governance mechanisms for pollution control
