BEIJING, Dec. 7 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government
will reduce sulfur levels of lead-free gasoline to 150 parts per million (ppm)
in the revised gas standard.
The move would help improve air quality, an
environmental official said.
The revised lead-free gas standard,
to be announced by the end of this year, will drive gas with sulfur levels of
500 ppm out of market on Dec. 31, 2009, said Li Xinmin, deputy director of the
pollution control department of the State Environmental Protection
Administration (SEPA), at a symposium on automobile pollution control.
The new standard would meet the Euro-III emission
norm, which constrained sulfur levels to 150 ppm maximum.
"Automobile emissions have become a major factor of
urban pollution, " Li said.
Statistics from the SEPA show China produced almost
6.21 million cars in the first ten months this year and it is expected the
country's automobile output will exceed seven million for the whole year.
In the first half, sulfur dioxide emissions increased
by 4.2 percent, from the same period a year earlier.
Sinopec, the China Petroleum and Chemical
Corporation, one of the major petroleum companies in China, announced plans to
invest 30 billion yuan (3.75 billion U.S. dollars) in reducing the sulfur levels
in gasoline.
Xu Hui, deputy director of Sinopec's technology
development department, said some companies were already capable of producing
gas with sulfur levels less than 150 ppm.
It would take a lot of effort to meet the new gas
standard, Li Xinming said, adding that currently only gas provided in Beijing
and Guangzhou contain low levels of sulfur.
Xu said gas producers would find it difficult to
reduce sulfur levels as the sulfur levels in imported crude oil were high: an
average of 1.11 percent of the imported oil by Sinopec in the first ten months,
whereas sulfur levels of imported oil in 1999 was only 0.17 percent.
The high sulfur level of crude oil would pose a
challenge to making clean auto fuel, Xu said.
China banned the sale of gasoline containing lead in
July 2000.Experts estimate the move reduced lead emissions by 1,500 tons each
year.