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Keywords
Air pollution
Climate (campaign title)
Coal
Day
Energy
KWCI (GPI)
Monuments
Outdoors
Statue Covered with Coal Dust
A Buddhist statue covered by coal dust in the Yungang Grottoes. Until the railway became the main method of transporting coal in 1998, up to 16,000 coal trucks passed outside the Grottoes. Coal dust gradually formed an acidic dust coat on the 1,500 year-old carvings, which is extremely difficult to remove. Despite restoration efforts, the carvings crumble away at the lightest touch.
Unique identifier:
GP01LMF
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
25/08/2008
Locations:
China
,
Datong
,
East Asia
,
Shaanxi
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / Simon Lim
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Coal Power Plants Documentation in Shanxi Province
China is a big energy producer and consumer and most of its energy is derived from coal. The cities of Datong, Xiaoyi and Linfen in the Shanxi Province, all benefit and suffer from coal. The Datong massive high-quality once-abundant coal reserves are now on the verge of exhaustion; subsequently unemployment is rising. Coal also threatens the survival of the area's cultural heritage. In Xiaoyi, one of the top ten coal producing areas in Shanxi Province, coal mining processing and combustion have taken their toll on the health and well-being of residents and the surrounding environment. The water in a nearby creek runs yellow-black; piles of coal sludge litter the adjacent landscape, which is used by local sheepherders for grazing. The city of Linfen is better known today for its excessive air pollution, a forest of smokestacks surrounds the city and the pollution generated by them has severely affected local farmers. As this brief glimpse of the Shanxi Province shows, the people and the environment are paying the price for the world's dirtiest fuel.
Related Collections:
'The True Cost of Coal' Report
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