Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Haze drives demand for clean air products

(China Daily)

12:38, January 14, 2013

A staff member at a pharmacy in Beijing sets out a display of masks on Sunday. (For China Daily/Wu Hailang)

The market for dust masks and air purifiers is booming in Beijing because the capital has been shrouded for several days in thick fog and haze, an indicator of heavily polluted air.

There is a huge demand for dust masks, particularly those labeled "PM2.5 masks", which are among the most expensive and are said to be able to help block fine particulate matter.

"We have sold dozens of these masks today," said Wang Hu, a salesman at a 7-Eleven convenience store in Beijing's Chaoyang district, referring to the "PM 2.5 masks".

The store sold out of the masks, priced at 32 yuan ($5.15), before 2 pm on Sunday.

Other masks have also seen a spike in sales.

Liu Qiong, a staff member at Haodekuai Pharmacy, said sales of disposable masks used by hospitals have tripled in the past few days.

Around 6,920 masks were sold over a two-day period on Taobao and Tmall, two popular e-commerce websites in China.

Sales of air purifiers have also increased. Many customers wearing masks rushed into electrical appliance retailers to buy air purifiers for their families.

"My daughter has severe allergic rhinitis, and she suffers a lot because of the polluted air," Beijing Evening News quoted a man who paid 5,000 yuan for an air purifier at Dazhong Electronics as saying.

"My home is a little too big for one device, so I bought another one. I hope it can effectively improve the air quality in my home."

According to the newspaper, the majority of air purifiers that customers chose are priced between 3,000 and 5,000 yuan, with the more expensive ones being the most popular.

Online sales of air purifiers have increased 16 percent compared with last year, according to Taobao.

We Recommend:

Your moment supports my whole life

Love makes us stay together forever

Chinese under the pressure

China sends patrol vessel to S. China Sea

Why ‘Chinese style road crossing’ occurs

Beijing witnesses 7th snowfall this winter

Survey: Chinese men more 'hasty' in love

China's weekly story (2012.12.21-12.27)

Revised traffic regulation takes effect in China


Email|Print|Comments(Editor:王欣、陈丽丹)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Chengdu MAC conducts actual-combat drill

  2. Winter training in snow forest

  3. Parade of 1,000 Polleras held

  4. Life is an education

  5. Dense fog hits E,C China

  6. 5 died, 19 injured in traffic accident

  7. 1st individual user of grid-connected PV power

  8. Beautiful night scenery of Harbin

  9. Predicting a baby's gender

  10. 70th Golden Globes held in Hollywood

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Philippines moves in wrong direction
  2. Drinking water safety is not a simple problem
  3. Japan's envisaged 'warning shots' dangerous
  4. When Chinese wives meet American mothers-in-law
  5. Will you leave a city because of cold?
  6. Labor system reform renders salute to Constitution
  7. China's yuan unlikely to appreciate sharply in 2013
  8. Good times gone?
  9. Salaries stifled amid sluggish exports
  10. China to surpass U.S. by 2049: report

What’s happening in China

China's social trust index declined further last year, according to the Annual Report on Social Mentality of China 2012

  1. Police chief punished for concealing son's crime
  2. Key suspect dead in NE China bus explosion
  3. Beijing moves to curb prolonged haze pollution
  4. Village to be moved after SW China landslide
  5. Boosting migrants' education