Coronavirus hit Hubei reports 108 more deaths, toll reaches 2112 in China

BEIJING: Coronavirus hard-hit epicenter Hubai reported 108 more fatalities due to CONVID 19 and the overall death toll jumped to 2,112 on Thursday.

Most of the deaths were in the provincial capital Wuhan, where the virus first emerged in December, according to the daily update from the Hubei health commission. Over 74,500 people have now been infected with the new coronavirus nationwide.

Advertisment

Hubei health officials said there had been 615 new cases in Wuhan and 13 more elsewhere in the province. However, the Hubei health commission said it was reducing the number of previously reported cases in a number of cities in the province by 279.

The adjustment meant a net increase on Thursday of 349 new cases across the province.

Even without the adjustment, the number of new cases was sharply lower than the daily updates of recent weeks. On Wednesday, there were 1,693 new cases reported in the province. It was not immediately clear how the over-reporting had occurred.

The coronavirus epidemic that has paralyzed the Chinese economy may have a silver lining for the environment.

China s carbon emissions have dropped by least 100 million metric tonnes over the past two weeks, according to a study published on Wednesday by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) in Finland.

That is nearly six percent of global emissions during the same period last year.

The rapid spread of the novel coronavirus — which has killed over 2,000 and infected more than 74,000 people across China — has led to a drop in demand for coal and oil, resulting in the emissions slump, the study published on the British-based Carbon Brief website said.

Over the past two weeks, daily power generation at coal power plants was at a four-year low compared with the same period last year, while steel production has sunk to a five-year low, researchers found.

China is the world s biggest importer and consumer of oil, but production at refineries in Shandong province — the country s petroleum hub — fell to the lowest level since autumn 2015, the report said.

Economic activity in China usually picks up after the Lunar New Year holiday, which began on January 25.

But authorities extended the holidays this year — by a week in many parts of the country including Shanghai — in an effort to contain the epidemic by keeping people at home.

“Measures to contain coronavirus have resulted in reductions of 15 per cent to 40 per cent in output across key industrial sectors,” the report said.

“This is likely to have wiped out a quarter or more of the country s CO2 (carbon dioxide) emissions over the past two weeks, the period when activity would normally have resumed after the Chinese New Year holiday.”

But environmentalists have warned that the reduction is temporary, and that a government stimulus — if directed at ramping up production among heavy polluters — could reverse the environmental gains.

“After the coronavirus calms down, it is quite likely we will observe a round of so-called retaliatory pollution – factories maximizing production to compensate for their losses during the shutdown period,” said Li Shuo, a policy adviser for Greenpeace China. “This is a tested and proven pattern.”

Meanwhile, China s nitrogen dioxide emissions — a byproduct of fossil fuel combustion in vehicles and power plants — fell 36 per cent in the week following the Lunar New Year holidays, compared with the same period a year earlier, according to another study by CREA that used satellite data.

Read more: Death toll from coronavirus crosses 2,000 mark in China

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments