News Flash
BANGKOK, Jan 23, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Air pollution forced nearly 200 schools
in Bangkok to close on Thursday, local authorities said, as officials urged
people to work from home and restricted heavy vehicles in the city.
Seasonal air pollution has long afflicted Thailand, like many countries in
the region, as colder, stagnant winter air combines with smoke from crop
stubble burning and car fumes.
By Thursday morning, the Thai capital was the sixth most polluted major city
in the world, according to IQAir.
Level of PM2.5 pollutants -- cancer-causing microparticles small enough to
enter the bloodstream through the lungs -- hit 122 micrograms per cubic
metre.
The World Health Organization recommends 24-hour average exposures should not
be more than 15 for most days of the year.
Earlier this week, Bangkok authorities said schools in areas with elevated
levels of PM2.5 could choose to close.
And by Friday morning, 194 of the 437 schools under the authority of the
Bangkok Metropolitan Authority had shut their doors, affecting thousands of
students.
The facilities range from kindergartens to secondary schools and the closures
last from a day to a week.
Dozens of other schools in the capital are not under BMA authority and
figures there were not available.
The figure is the highest number of school closures since 2020, when all
schools under BMA authority shut over air pollution.
Earlier this week, authorities encouraged people to work from home, but the
scheme is voluntary and has just 100,000 registered participants in a city of
some 10 million.
Officials have also limited access for six-wheel trucks in parts of the
capital until late Friday.
The government has announced incentives to stop crop stubble burning and is
even trialling a novel method to tackle air pollution by spraying cold water
or dry ice into the air above the smog.
But the measures have had little impact so far, and opposition politicians
have accused Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra -- currently in Davos
for the World Economic Forum -- of failing to take the issue seriously.
"While the prime minister is breathing fresh air in Switzerland as she tries
to attract more investment to Thailand... millions of Thais are breathing
polluted air into their lungs," Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut, leader of the
People's Party, charged in a Facebook post.