Imagine waking up every morning at 8 a.m. to snap a photo of the sky from your balcony—for 10 years straight. Meet Wang Ruchun, a Shijiazhuang resident in Hebei Province, whose daily ritual has turned into a visual diary of China's air quality evolution. 🌏
Starting as a personal project to document smog levels, Wang’s 'Tracking the Haze' folder slowly transformed into 'Tracking the Blue Sky' as clearer days became the norm. 🎯 His photos, paired with online pollution data, reveal a decade-long trend: skies getting bluer, one snapshot at a time.
📱 'It’s like watching a slow-motion environmental documentary,' Wang says. His archive isn’t just art—it’s accidental activism, blending citizen science with storytelling. For travelers and eco-enthusiasts, it’s proof that progress is possible. 💡
From Netflix-worthy persistence to Instagrammable skies, Wang’s story bridges climate hope and cultural curiosity. Who knew a balcony could be a front-row seat to history?
Reference(s):
cgtn.com