Linfen Explained

Linfen
Native Name:临汾市
Native Name Lang:zh-Hans
Other Name:Pingyang
Settlement Type:Prefecture-level city
Pushpin Map:Shanxi
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Mapsize:240
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of the city centre in Shanxi
Coor Pinpoint:Linfen municipal government
Coordinates:36.088°N 111.519°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:People's Republic of China
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Type2:County-level divisions
Subdivision Name1:Shanxi
Subdivision Name2:17
Seat Type:Municipal seat
Seat:Yaodu District
Government Type:Prefecture-level city
Leader Title:CPC Linfen Secretary
Leader Name:Yue Puyu (Chinese: 岳普煜)
Leader Title1:Mayor
Leader Name1:Liu Yuqiang (Chinese: 刘予强)
Area Total Km2:20275
Area Blank1 Title:Districts[1]
Area Metro Km2:1307
Area Urban Km2:1307
Elevation M:452
Elevation Min M:385.1
Population Total:3976481
Population As Of:2020 census
Population Footnotes:[2]
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Urban Km2:auto
Population Density Metro Km2:auto
Population Metro:959198
Population Urban:959198
Demographics Type2:GDP[3]
Demographics2 Title1:Prefecture-level city
Demographics2 Info1:CN¥ 150 billion
US$ 23.7 billion
Demographics2 Title2:Per capita
Demographics2 Info2:CN¥ 37,848
US$ 6,056
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:041000
Area Code:0357
Elevation Max M:2346.8
Timezone:China Standard
Utc Offset:+8
Blank Name:Licence plates
Blank Info:Chinese: L
Blank1 Name:Administrative division code
Blank1 Info:141000
Iso Code:CN-SX-10
P:Línfén
W:Lin-fen
Also Known As:Jin Prefecture
Jinzhou
P2:Jìnzhōu
W2:Chin-chou
Altname3:Pingyang Commandery
Pingyang
P3:Píngyángjùn
W3:P'ing-yang Chün

Linfen is a prefecture-level city in the southwest of Shanxi province, China, bordering Shaanxi province to the west. It is situated along the banks of the Fen River. It has an area of [4] and according to the 2020 Census, a population of 3,976,481 inhabitants of which 959,198 live in the built-up (or metro) area made up of Yaodu urban district. The GDP of Linfen ranked second in Shanxi Province. It was known as Pingyang during the Spring and Autumn period. In 2006, the American Blacksmith Institute listed Linfen as one of the ten most polluted cities in the world.[5]

Prior to 1978, Linfen was famous for its spring water, greenery and rich agriculture and therefore nicknamed "The Modern Fruit and Flower Town". Since then it has been developing into a main industrial center for coal mining, which has significantly damaged the city's environment, air quality, farming, health and its previous status as a green village.

Name

Linfen is named for the Fen River. Its former names include Jin, Jinzhou (晋州), and Pingyang .[6]

History

Chinese archeologists have claimed that legendary ruler Yao's capital was located in Linfen, a confirmation of local legend responsible for the name of the city's Yaodu District. So, Linfen city is the earliest capital of China.

The area was the center of the marchland and duchy of Jin, named for the Jin River The duchy collapsed in the but gave its name to a Chinese princely title used as the dynastic name of the Sima clan. was centered on the town, which took its name as Jin and Jinzhou. Later, it was renamed, which was also adapted as the name for its chief town.[7] The Xiongnu emperor of Former Zhao Liu Cong made Pingyang his residence in the fourth century. "He kept court at Pingyang in [Shanxi] and ruled over central and southern [Shanxi], over [Shaanxi] (except for the Han basin), northern [Henan] (except for Kaifeng), southern [Hebei], and northern [Shandong]."[8] In the 10th century, the city's walls were considered "fortified beyond approach".[9]

In the 1980s, Linfen was nicknamed "The Modern Fruit and Flower Town".

Geography

Linfen is located in the southwestern part of Shanxi, on the lower reaches of the Fen River, bounded by Changzhi and Jincheng to the east, the Yellow River to the west (which also forms the border with Shaanxi), Jinzhong and Lüliang to the north, and Yuncheng to the south. The prefecture ranges in latitude from 35° 23′ N to 36° 37′ N, spanning, and in longitude from 110° 22′ E to 112° 34′ E, spanning 200km (100miles). In all, the city's administrative area, at, covers 13% of the province's area.[4]

Within its borders Linfen City has a variety of topographical features. It is characterised as having a "U" shape, with its mountains, covering 29.2% of the prefectural area, on all four cardinal directions, a basin, the Linfen Basin (Chinese: 临汾盆地), covering 19.4%, in the middle, and intervening hills, covering 51.4%, in between.[4] In the east, from north to south, are Mount Huo (Chinese: 霍山) and the Zhongtiao Mountains; in the west are the Lüliang Mountains, with elevations mostly above . The highest point in the prefecture is the main peak of Mount Huo, at, and the lowest is in Xiangning County, at . Important rivers in the area include the Yellow, Fen, Xinshui (Chinese: 昕水河), Qin (Chinese: 沁河), Hui (Chinese: 浍河), E (Chinese: 鄂河), and Qingshui Rivers (Chinese: 清水河).

The whole prefecture-level city features a great variety of terrain. The city itself sits in a basin, which aggravates the pollution.

Climate

Linfen has a continental, monsoon-influenced semi-arid climate (Köppen BSk), with moderately cold, but dry winters, and hot, somewhat humid summers. The monthly 24-hour average temperature ranges from NaN°C in January to in July, and the annual mean is . The annual precipitation stands at 455.1mm, with close to 70% of this total falling from June to September. The frost-free period lasts on average 190 days per year. Extreme temperatures have ranged from NaN°C to 42.3°C.[10]

Pollution

China's rapid industrialization and urbanization beginning in the 1990s (see opening of China) led to increased energy demand causing a dramatic increase in the price of coal. This led to a rapid expansion of loosely regulated private mines. Mining, cooking, smelting and other heavy industries which developed around the city have led to catastrophic environmental damage.[11]

In 2006, the Blacksmith Institute included Linfen in its annual "10 worst" report, calling the city the most polluted city in China.[12] It has also been listed as one of the world's ten dirtiest cities by the Popular Science website.[13] The city has ranked at the bottom of the World Bank's air quality rankings.[14]

From its low point, in 2004, with only fifteen days out of the year with an acceptable level of air pollution, the environmental situation has improved.[15] After a series of negative reports on the extreme level of pollution in the city, efforts were made to clean up Linfen. Substandard mines were closed. Coal trucks were kept from entering the city, resulting in much less coal dust. The city has also switched much of its heating source from coal to gas. 197 large coal-fired boilers and more than 600 smaller boilers were decommissioned. As of 2007, 85% of population used natural gas rather than coal for their heating. The State Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) has forced many of the less-efficient smaller factories to close and enforced stricter standards for larger factories including mandating the installation of sulfur scrubbers.

Since 2006, the government has taken a series of measures to modify industrial structure and economic development mode. Relevant policies was issued such as emission thresholds of industrial pollution. Over the last few years the Ministry of Environmental Protection has been closely monitoring Linfen's environment conditions. While the China Youth Daily reported in 2014 that Linfen was experiencing the great change from the "most polluted city" to "model city of environmental protection",[16] other sources suggest that little progress has been made in combating pollution. In 2018, the Chinese government openly criticized the city's failure to meet pollution targets, and a 2019 report by the Chinese Ministry of Ecology and Environment found that the city's air pollution was the worst among the 168 cities the ministry monitored.[17] Following the report, the city's government ordered further pollution controls for the city's industry.

Administrative divisions

The prefecture-level city of Linfen is divided in one district, two cities and fourteen counties. The information here presented uses the metric system and data from 2010 Census.

Map
English NameSimplifiedTraditionalPinyinAreaPopulationDensity
1Yaodu DistrictChinese: 尧都区Chinese: 堯都區Yáodū Qū1,316944,050717
2Houma CityChinese: 侯马市Chinese: 侯馬市Hóumǎ Shì274240,005876
3Huozhou CityChinese: 霍州市Huòzhōu Shì765282,907370
4Quwo CountyChinese: 曲沃县Chinese: 曲沃縣Qǔwò Xiàn438237,033541
5Yicheng CountyChinese: 翼城县Chinese: 翼城縣Yìchéng Xiàn1,163311,471268
6Xiangfen CountyChinese: 襄汾县Chinese: 襄汾縣Xiāngfén Xiàn1,304442,614339
7Hongtong CountyChinese: 洪洞县Chinese: 洪洞縣Hóngtóng Xiàn1,563733,421469
8Gu CountyChinese: 古县Chinese: 古縣Gǔ Xiàn1,19391,79877
9Anze CountyChinese: 安泽县Chinese: 安澤縣Ānzé Xiàn1,96582,01242
10Fushan CountyChinese: 浮山县Chinese: 浮山縣Fúshān Xiàn946127,831135
11Ji CountyChinese: 吉县Chinese: 吉縣Jí Xiàn1,777106,40760
12Xiangning CountyChinese: 乡宁县Chinese: 鄉寧縣Xiāngníng Xiàn2,029233,162115
13Pu CountyChinese: 蒲县Chinese: 蒲縣Pú Xiàn1,508107,33971
14Daning CountyChinese: 大宁县Chinese: 大寧縣Dàníng Xiàn96764,50167
15Yonghe CountyChinese: 永和县Chinese: 永和縣Yǒnghé Xiàn1,21963,64952
16Xi CountyChinese: 隰县Chinese: 隰縣Xí Xiàn1,415103,61773
17Fenxi CountyChinese: 汾西县Chinese: 汾西縣Fénxī Xiàn880144,795165

Tourism

Linfen prefecture is home to several notable tourist attractions including the Hukou Waterfall which is the largest waterfall on the Yellow River and the second largest in China. Hukou Waterfall is located 150km (90miles) west of Linfen city in Jinshan Gorge.[18]

Other attractions are mostly located in Hongtong county. Most notable among these is Guangsheng Temple, built in 147 CE. Located in the upper Guangsheng temple is the Feihong Pagoda, the largest and best preserved glazed Chinese pagoda.[19] [20] Also in Hongtong county is the Susan Prison (Chinese: 苏三监狱), a restored Ming dynasty prison made famous by the Peking opera play (Chinese: 玉堂春). It is Chinese oldest surviving prison.[21] Dahuaishu Ancestor Memorial Garden is a major shown for the mandatory population migration (aka Hongwu great migration, 洪武大移民) in early Ming Dynasty.

Demographics

Linfen recorded a population of approximately 4,508,400 people as of 2019, an increase of 80,100 from 2018.[22] The city reported 2,414,700 urban residents, and 2,093,700 rural residents, giving the city a 53.56% urbanization rate. There are 28 ethnic minorities in Linfen with a population exceeding 10,000 people: the Hui, the Manchu, the Tujia, Mongols, the Miao, the Zhuang, Koreans, the Yi, the Buyi, the Bai, Uyghurs, the Mulao, the She, Tibetans, the Li, the Dong, the Yao, Tajiks, the Gelao, the Daur, the Lahu, the Wa, the Hani, the Tu, the Xibo, the Lisu, the Qiang, and the Jingpo.

Economy

As of 2019, the city reported a GDP of 145.26 billion Renminbi.[23] Linfen's primary sector makes up 7.1% of the city's GDP, the secondary sector contributes 43.3% of the city's GDP, and the tertiary sector makes up 49.6% of the city's GDP.

Industry

Linfen has rich mineral resources including coal, iron ore, copper, and lead. Hedong Coal Field, Huoxi Coal Field and Qinshui Coal Field together comprise 62.9 billion tons of coal reserves. Iron ore reserves exceed 420 million tons. Coal mining and dressing, coking, metallurgy, non-ferrous metal smelting, and chemicals are the principle industries.[24]

After a World Bank report in 2006 called Linfen "the most polluted city in the world", the local government began closing a number of mines and factories, costing the city's economy $300 million in 2007 alone.[25] A number of industries also refitted their facilities to track and reduce pollution. The city's economy stagnated in the following years.[26]

Transportation

Air

Linfen Yaodu Airport, in Yaodu district, was built in 1958 and closed in 1965. The airport has been under renovation since September 2010 and started operation in January 2016.

Railway

Linfen railway station, in Yaodu district, was built in 1935 on the important southern Tongpu railway.

Linfen West railway station, in Yaodu district, was built in 2014. It is on the Datong–Xi'an high-speed railway. From this station, passengers can go to Beijing, Xi'an, Taiyuan and Shijiazhuang directly.

Road

Education

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development . Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development . China Urban Construction Statistical Yearbook 2017 . 2019 . China Statistics Press . Beijing . 46 . 11 January 2020.
  2. Web site: China: Shānxī (Prefectures, Cities, Districts and Counties) - Population Statistics, Charts and Map.
  3. Book: 山西省统计局、国家统计局山西调查总队 . 《山西统计年鉴-2021》. December 2021 . 中国统计出版社 . 978-7-5037-7824-7.
  4. Web site: Geography of Linfen . https://web.archive.org/web/20070217073553/http://www.linfen.gov.cn/go.shtml . dead . February 17, 2007 . Lifen People's Government . 2008-09-09 . zh-cn.
  5. Web site: Choi. Charles Q.. World's 10 Most Polluted Places. Livescience.com. 24 January 2013. October 18, 2006.
  6. Web site: 2024-06-09 . 临汾概述 . Linfen Overview . One-stop Service Platform for High-level Talents in Linfen Cit . zh.
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZnlpAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA46 p. 46
  8. .
  9. https://books.google.com/books?id=R0QpslzUi50C&pg=PA407 p. 407
  10. Web site: 2024-06-09 . 临汾气候背景分析 . Climatological background analysis for Linfen . China Weather Network . zh.
  11. Web site: China's 'most polluted city' breathes cleaner air. China Daily. 21 January 2013. November 10, 2012.
  12. Web site: Top 10 Most Polluted Places. Blacksmith Institute. 21 January 2013. Adobe Portable Document Format.
  13. http://www.popsci.com/environment/gallery/2008-06/worlds-dirtiest-cities The World's 10 Dirtiest Cities
  14. News: Fighting for air: frontline of war on global warming. 20 January 2013. The Guardian. March 26, 2007. Johnathan Watts. Randeep Ramesh.
  15. Web site: FUnk. McKenzie. China's Green Evolution. Popular Science Magazine. 21 January 2013. July 7, 2007.
  16. China Youth Daily Feb 23, 2014
  17. News: 2019-04-15. China coal hub Linfen to extend anti-pollution curbs to third quarter: draft plan. en. Reuters. 2020-05-16.
  18. Book: The Rough Guide to China. 2003. David Leffman . Simon Lewis . Jeremy Atiyah . 263.
  19. Web site: Feihong Pagoda in Hongtong County of Shanxi Province. China Internet Information Center. 24 January 2013.
  20. Web site: Zhang. Zixuan. Land of fairy tales. China Daily Asia Pacific. 24 January 2013.
  21. Book: The Rough Guide to China. 2003. David Leffman . Simon Lewis . Jeremy Atiyah . 262.
  22. Web site: zh:人口状况-市情概况-临汾市人民政府门户网站. http://www.linfen.gov.cn/contents/284/23796.html. 2020-03-10. Linfen People's Government. zh. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200516173030/http://www.linfen.gov.cn/contents/284/23796.html. 2020-05-16. 2020-05-16.
  23. Web site: zh:2019年临汾市GDP同比增长6%-统计信息-临汾市人民政府门户网站. http://www.linfen.gov.cn/contents/318/497218.html. Linfen People's Government. zh. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200516172403/http://www.linfen.gov.cn/contents/318/497218.html. 2020-05-16. 2020-05-16.
  24. Web site: Linfen (Shanxi) City Information. 21 January 2013. September 11, 2011.
  25. Web site: Choking in China's polluted city - CNN.com. Chang. Emily. 2009-12-15. www.cnn.com. en. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200516171754/https://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/12/15/china.pollution/index.html. 2020-05-16. 2020-05-16.
  26. Web site: zh:中国 国内生产总值 : 地级市. https://www.ceicdata.com/zh-hans/china/gross-domestic-product-prefecture-level-city?page=25. www.ceicdata.com. zh. 2020-05-16.