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    • 2008

      • The issue of light pollution in Hong Kong rose to public prominence in 2008, and the government initiated a policy review the following year, culminating in the 2011-2015 "Task Force on External Lighting" to look into the problem, including two rounds of public consultation in 2013.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_pollution_in_Hong_Kong
  1. 其他人也問了

  2. Skyline of Hong Kong at night. Hong Kong has been named the world's worst city for light pollution. Commercial and residential areas Mong Kok, Tsim Sha Tsui and Causeway Bay are found to be the most severe areas of light pollution. Due to the spotlights and LED billboards, Hong Kong’s sky is many times brighter than other cities.

  3. According to the data collected by the HKU Department of Physics since 2003, the brightness of the Hong Kong urban night sky is at least 30 times higher than that in the less-populated countrysides.

  4. 2013年3月21日 · Two-year study finds parts of city to be 1,000 times above international standards. Author says upward pointing lights and advertising hoarding add to light pollution. Even remote parts of...

  5. Slogan 1. Monitor Light Pollution · Protect the dark sky. Slogan 3. Light Pollution Research at The University of Hong Kong. Slogan 5. Body. LIGHT POLLUTION RESOURCES. HK Night Sky Brightness Map.

  6. initiated the a citizen science project A Survey of Light Pollution in Hong Kong in 2007. At the end of this 18-month survey with over 170 participants coming from different walks of life contributing 2,000 individual readings of the night sky conditions, the first Hong Kong light pollution map – taken over 199 distinct locations – was created.

  7. www.hkengineer.org.hk › issue › vol47-oct2019Hong Kong Engineer

    Whereas no hard laws have been introduced to control light pollution in Hong Kong, there are soft laws that promote environmental sustainability and help tackle the light pollution problem. An example is BEAM Plus of the Hong Kong Green Building Council

  8. For the last 10 years Dr Jason Pun of the Faculty of Science at The University of Hong Kong and his team have been researching the extent of light pollution across Hong Kong, and looking into ways that it can be reduced without the city losing its lustre as the