Update | Smog crisis in China leads to increased research into effect of pollution on fertility
Beijing's funding for research into how chronic pollution is affecting childbearing triples in last five years, with the situation 'particularly grim'
![A couple braving the smog in Tiananmen Square. Photo: AP](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/2013/12/11/smog_selfie_0.jpg?itok=RRNUJlAW)
As China's environmental woes grow, typified by recent toxic smog, Beijing has been increasing funding for research into how pollution affects fertility.
The number of studies funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the leading research institute, has tripled in the last five years.
It has supported 68 such research projects this year, compared to just 23 in 2008.
Dr Liu Liangpo, a researcher with the Institute of Urban Environment at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said this showed the government's "deep concern" about the growing crisis.
He said infertility was a global issue, but the situation in China was "particularly grim" due to the severe pollution. And he warned: "Polluted water, unsafe food, bad air ... so many things are threatening the reproductive capacity of Chinese people.
"If the situation gets worse, China's birth-control policy would become redundant."
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