The Christian Science Monitor

This year, as winter nears, residents of China's coal country turn to gas

A man rides a bike down a narrow road in Nanxianwen Village on the outskirts of Taiyuan, China. Newly installed gas lines (yellow pipe on the right) and boilers have replaced coal furnaces in each of the village's 300 households.

Yin Xiaoling stands in her kitchen on a recent morning admiring her new gas-powered boiler. With winter approaching, she’s happy to have it in place of her old coal furnace, which covered her courtyard in soot and required frequent upkeep. The air outside is dense with smog, but Ms. Yin is optimistic that such days will soon be few.

“The gas heater is clean and convenient,” she says. She then makes a declaration that not long ago would have been considered unthinkable in Nanxianwen, a quiet village in the heart of China’s coal country. And although she speaks of her own family, she might as well be speaking for the entire village. 

“We’ve said goodbye to coal.”

Gas heating, a small miracle for Yin and her family, is part of a much larger transformation for

City in transition'Making a sacrifice'

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