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  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hong Kong proposes tighter claw machine regulations over addiction fears James Lee
    Hong Kong authorities have proposed tightening the regulation of claw machine shops by implementing a licensing regime to curb addiction risks. A claw machine in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. The Home and Youth Affairs Bureau’s proposal, included in a document submitted to the Legislative Council (LegCo) on Monday, comes as claw machine shops proliferate in the city as a low-maintenance business opportunity. “Since these activities may involve gaming elements or addiction risks, a
     

Hong Kong proposes tighter claw machine regulations over addiction fears

5 May 2026 at 07:02
Claw machine featured image

Hong Kong authorities have proposed tightening the regulation of claw machine shops by implementing a licensing regime to curb addiction risks.

A claw machine in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A claw machine in Hong Kong. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The Home and Youth Affairs Bureau’s proposal, included in a document submitted to the Legislative Council (LegCo) on Monday, comes as claw machine shops proliferate in the city as a low-maintenance business opportunity.

“Since these activities may involve gaming elements or addiction risks, appropriate restrictions on format or content may be necessary to protect participants, especially youth, from physical or mental harm or significant financial loss,” the bureau said.

The government seeks to introduce new requirements, such as posting a notice indicating that devices are licensed. The bureau is also considering mandatory addiction warning labels on machines.

A list of licensed premises has also been uploaded to the Home Affairs Department’s Office of the Licensing Authority, the document read.

The tightened regulations will function under the city’s Gambling Ordinance, which currently stipulates that claw machine shops must hold an Amusement With Prizes Licence (AWPL). Before that licence can be granted, a venue must hold a public entertainment licence.

However, a 2022 High Court ruling determined that claw machines do not meet the definition of “entertainment” and thus do not require a public entertainment licence, creating a regulatory gap.

The bureau is proposing to remove the requirement for a public entertainment licence and allow the Home Affairs Department to issue AWPLs directly.

Prize caps, addiction risks

Speaking on an RTHK programme, lawmaker Vincent Cheng said he agreed with the government’s proposal in principle but asked the authorities to consider whether the new curbs would stamp out the business.

A claw machine loaded with panda toys in Tsim Sha Tsui area, December 11, 2024. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A claw machine loaded with panda toys in Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong, December 11, 2024. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

“We have to consider whether [the regulation] will affect the industry’s development,” he said, urging the government to “strike a balance.”

Lawmaker Bill Tang, who chairs the LegCo Panel on Home Affairs, Culture and Sports, welcomed the tightened regulations, saying that some claw machine operations had “evolved” beyond their original leisurely purpose.

Prizes in certain machines now include high-value items such as mobile phones, encouraging gambling behaviour, Tang said. He proposed a HK$5 limit on the fee for each game and that the value of each prize be capped at HK$300.

The bureau has also proposed to regulate internet cafes, moving away from a Code of Practice model and introducing a mandatory licensing system.

One option is to bring internet cafes in line with the regulatory regime for traditional gaming arcades, imposing strict age restrictions for adult- or children-only venues and a ban on students in school uniform.

Another model would be to allow cafes to operate if they meet strict safety conditions.

The proposals are scheduled to be discussed at the legislature on Monday.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hong Kong data centres have among world’s worst energy carbon footprints – UN study Tom Grundy
    A new UN study has named Hong Kong’s data centres as some of the most carbon-intensive in the world, blaming the city’s heavy dependence on a fossil-fuel-powered energy grid. A government data centre in Cheung Sha Wan. Photo: Googlemaps. The report, titled “Environmental Cost of AI’s Energy Use,” examined the global carbon, land and water impacts of the infrastructure powering AI, saying that by 2030, data centres could consume 945 terawatt-hours. That is “nearly triple the combined a
     

Hong Kong data centres have among world’s worst energy carbon footprints – UN study

8 June 2026 at 05:53
data centre hong kong

A new UN study has named Hong Kong’s data centres as some of the most carbon-intensive in the world, blaming the city’s heavy dependence on a fossil-fuel-powered energy grid.

A government data centre in Cheung Sha Wan.
A government data centre in Cheung Sha Wan. Photo: Googlemaps.

The report, titled “Environmental Cost of AI’s Energy Use,” examined the global carbon, land and water impacts of the infrastructure powering AI, saying that by 2030, data centres could consume 945 terawatt-hours.

That is “nearly triple the combined annual electricity use of Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nigeria, countries collectively home to more than 650 million people,” according to a UN press release.

coal energy electric Lamma power station
Lamma power station. File photo: Tom Grundy/HKFP.

“Indonesia, India, and Hong Kong (SAR) are among the most carbon-intensive grids with carbon footprints 62%, 51%, and 43% higher than the global average, respectively. Poland and Mainland China rank lower with carbon intensities at 30% and 21% higher than the global average,” the UN University’s Institute for Water, Environment and Health said in a report on Wednesday.

In comparison, the carbon footprint of electricity in the US, Germany, and Italy is 18 per cent, 24 per cent, and 32 per cent below the global average, respectively.

Energy in Hong Kong is 67 per cent derived from fossil fuels, 32 per cent from nuclear and just 1 per cent from renewables, the report said.

Energy sources for countries and territories across the world.
Energy sources for countries and territories across the world. Photo: UN.

There is also a water footprint for cooling heat-intensive data centres, as well as a land footprint. “AI-related water consumption could equal the basic annual domestic needs of 1.3 billion people by the end of the decade, while its land footprint may exceed 14,500 square kilometres – roughly twice the size of the Jakarta metropolitan area,” the UN said.

However, Hong Kong was ranked among the lightest for water and land consumption, mostly because its energy mix does not rely on renewable energy sources, which require large amounts land.

The environmental cost of data centres.
The environmental cost of data centres. Photo: UN.

As a trade and logistics hub, with around 300 internet service providers, Hong Kong remains a prime location for data centres. Its telecommunication networks connect to 12 external submarine optical fibre cable systems, with more under construction, according to the city’s Digital Policy Office.

The government is building a new 110,00 square metre data facility in Sandy Ridge, 90 per cent of which will be dedicated to data centres, according to a government press release in March.

Daily AI use, not training

The UN report said that day-to-day use of AI models accounted for around 80 to 90 per cent of total energy demand, as opposed to just model training. It cited the case of ChatGPT, which was processing around 2.5 billion prompts per day, with image generation requiring a thousand times more energy than a simple text query.

“China’s DeepSeek, launched in January 2025, attracted more than 20 million daily active users within three weeks, and had about 125 million monthly active users by mid-2025,” the report said.

An aerial view of Alibaba’s Zhangbei data centre cluster in Hebei, China.
An aerial view of Alibaba’s Zhangbei data centre cluster in Hebei, China. Data sources: Epoch AI; Sentinel-2 false-colour imagery, February 2026. Photo UN.

According to the Digital Policy Office website, “data centre operators are all striving to enhance energy efficiency , so as to reduce their power consumption, their operating expense and also their environmental impacts.”

It cites existing policies by the Electrical and Mechanical Services Department (EMSD), which set rules for ensuring the energy efficiency of buildings and regulate the use of fresh water in cooling towers for air conditioning systems.

The EMSD’s Green Data Centres Practice Guide lays out initiatives for efficient data centre design, procurement, operations and disposal, whilst also promoting the use of assessment tools to measure environmental impacts.

NGO warns hot weather can worsen air quality, urges gov’t action on pollutants and cooling measures in hot districts

1 June 2026 at 04:45
hot weather

NGO Green Power has urged the Hong Kong government to better regulate ozone precursors as hot weather exacerbates air pollution across the city.

A heatwave in Hong Kong in late May 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A heatwave in Hong Kong in late May 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Chemical compounds – such as nitrogen oxides, methane, Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) and carbon monoxide – form ground-level ozone by reacting in the lower atmosphere in the presence of sunlight. Ground-level ozone attacks and inflames lung tissue, but reducing underlying pollutants prevents harmful smog.

According to a Sunday press release, Green Power’s director, Cheng Luk-ki, said VOCs – which are emitted through oil and gas operations, petrol evaporation and chemical solvents – should be better regulated.

See also: How extreme heat became the deadliest silent killer among world weather disasters

“In the future, the public’s health may be affected by both high temperatures and air quality at the same time,” the press release said.

Last week, Hong Kong sweltered amid a days-long heatwave. Whilst rain brought some respite over the weekend, the Observatory predicts highs of 35 degrees Celsius by the end of this week.

Cooling measures for hottest areas

Green Power’s review of Hong Kong’s air quality situation in 2025 found that 15 air quality monitoring stations recorded “a total of 2,080 hours at High, Very High and Serious levels – collectively referred to as ‘High Risk (HR) hours.'”

See also: How Hong Kong’s elderly face deadly heat inside cramped cage homes

Cheng said Hong Kong was affected by a northern Chinese dust storm last April, pushing up the statistics. However, the NGO also noted that overall air quality has been improving thanks to the city’s diversification away from coal towards natural gas, as well as efforts to tighten emission standards for fuel-powered vehicles.

air pollution Hong Kong
Air pollution in Hong Kong. File Photo: GovHK.

The director said he had analysed last summer’s Air Quality Health Index data, and found that the nine days ranked as “high risk” all saw temperatures exceeding 29 degrees Celsius, “demonstrating a strong connection between heat and air quality.”

He warned that hot weather will become more frequent, as he urged the authorities to take action in the territory’s hottest districts.

The NGO recommended cooling measures in Tuen Mun, Tai Po, North District, Yuen Long and Tung Chung, “such as increasing greenery coverage, revitalising local rivers, and incorporating more ventilation corridor designs.”

See also: How extreme heat became the deadliest silent killer among world weather disasters

Hong Kong has already warmed by 1.7 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution, research NGO Berkeley Earth says. Heat and humidity may reach lethal levels for protracted periods by the end of the century, according to a 2023 study, making it impossible to stay outdoors in some parts of the world.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • 10 injured on Cathay Pacific flight from Australia that encountered turbulence Tom Grundy
    Ten people have been injured on a flight between Brisbane, Australia and Hong Kong that encountered turbulence. Medics boarded flight CX156 when it arrived in Hong Kong on Saturday, May 24, 2026, after crew and passengers sustained injuries during a turbulent flight. Photo: Grace Chan, via Threads. Cathay Pacific’s CX156 arrived in Hong Kong at 6.45am on Saturday, with medics boarding the plane to assess the condition of passengers and crew. According to the flagship airline, four pass
     

10 injured on Cathay Pacific flight from Australia that encountered turbulence

24 May 2026 at 00:49
cathay injuries

Ten people have been injured on a flight between Brisbane, Australia and Hong Kong that encountered turbulence.

Medics boarded flight CX156 when it arrived in Hong Kong on Saturday, May 24, 2026,.
Medics boarded flight CX156 when it arrived in Hong Kong on Saturday, May 24, 2026, after crew and passengers sustained injuries during a turbulent flight. Photo: Grace Chan, via Threads.

Cathay Pacific’s CX156 arrived in Hong Kong at 6.45am on Saturday, with medics boarding the plane to assess the condition of passengers and crew.

According to the flagship airline, four passengers and six cabin crew members sustained minor injuries, with eight sent to hospital.

“Medical personnel boarded the aircraft to assess the conditions of a small number of passengers and crew who reported feeling unwell, and they were provided with the utmost level of care,” a spokesperson for Cathay Pacific told HKFP on Tuesday. “We will continue to follow up and provide the necessary assistance. We are in the process of gathering more facts to better understand the circumstances, and it would not be appropriate to draw any premature conclusions at this stage.”

A video posted to social media appeared to show debris and food scattered across the floor of the aircraft.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Ebola outbreak: Hong Kong ramps up precautions Tom Grundy
    Hong Kong has stepped up precautions over the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Uganda, as the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the epidemic “a public health emergency of international concern.” In light of the Ebola outbreak, Centre for Health Protection personnel are strengthening health screenings for passengers arriving on flights from Africa at the airport on Sunday. Photo: GovHK. The WHO said on Sunday that there had been 246 suspected cases and 80
     

Ebola outbreak: Hong Kong ramps up precautions

18 May 2026 at 10:18
Ebola precautions

Hong Kong has stepped up precautions over the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Uganda, as the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the epidemic “a public health emergency of international concern.”

Centre for Health Protection personnel strengthened health screenings for passengers arriving on flights from Africa
In light of the Ebola outbreak, Centre for Health Protection personnel are strengthening health screenings for passengers arriving on flights from Africa at the airport on Sunday. Photo: GovHK.

The WHO said on Sunday that there had been 246 suspected cases and 80 suspected deaths in the DRC as of Saturday, in addition to a handful of apparent cases in Uganda.

The outbreak was caused by the Bundibugyo virus disease, and there is currently no vaccine.

There are no confirmed cases in Hong Kong, but the Centre for Health Protection (CHP) has enacted a series of precautionary measures, according to a government press release on Sunday.

Although there are no direct flights from the affected areas, “the CHP will strengthen health screening for passengers arriving on flights from Africa at the airport… Suspected cases will be immediately referred to public hospitals for isolation and treatment.”

It will also bolster public awareness and health education efforts, and provide airlines, doctors and hospitals with updated information.

The CHP advises against visiting affected regions.

Highly lethal

Ebola is transmitted to humans through close contact with the blood, secretions, organs, or other bodily fluids of infected animals.

The Centre for Health Protection. File photo: CHP, via Facebook.
The Centre for Health Protection. File photo: CHP, via Facebook.

The virus is highly lethal and causes haemorrhagic fever, systemic inflammation, and multi-organ failure. The case fatality rates from past outbreaks range from 25 to 90 per cent, according to the WHO – the average is 50 per cent.

Meanwhile, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is preparing a large-scale response to the outbreak, the humanitarian charity said in a press release on Sunday.

“The number of cases and deaths we are seeing in such a short timeframe, combined with the spread across several health zones and now across the border, is extremely concerning,” said MSF Emergency Programme Manager Trish Newport. “In Ituri, many people already struggle to access healthcare and live with ongoing insecurity, making rapid action critical to prevent the outbreak from escalating further.”

The NGO is mobilising more teams comprising medical, logistical, and support staff experienced in responding to viral haemorrhagic fever outbreaks, it said.

Over HK$140k raised for late Hong Kong hairstylist Pitt Cheung to be donated to cancer NGO

9 June 2026 at 03:00
Pitt Cheung

Funds raised for a Hong Kong hairstylist who died from nasopharyngeal cancer in April will be donated to NGO Cancer Information, as per his wishes.

Pitt Cheung
Pitt Cheung. Photo: gogetfunding.com.

Two rounds of fundraising initiatives for Pitt Cheung raised a total of HK$831,000 for his specialist treatment, leaving a balance of over HK$140,000 after his passing in April.

The fundraiser said that Cheung had exhausted radiotherapy, chemotherapy and immunotherapy treatments at public hospitals, so he switched to a recommended chemotherapy drug called Nab-paclitaxel, costing HK$72,000 per month.

Cheung died peacefully in hospital on April 26. A funeral for the 44-year-old was held on May 9.

A post on Pitt Cheung's fundraising Instagram profile on June 7, 2026.
A post on Pitt Cheung’s fundraising Instagram profile on June 7, 2026. Photo: @crowdfunding_for_pitt, via Instagram.

“After deduct[ing] the expenses for chemotherapy, follow-up appointments, check-ups, the chemo port surgery and hospitalisation, we are left with HK$140,620. Per Pitt’s wishes, we will donate this sum to NGO @cancer_information,” a post on Cheung’s fundraising Instagram account said on Sunday.

“This NGO provided lots of professional support and companionship to Pitt when he was fighting cancer, and we hope the funds can be used to help more people.”

The post thanked the Hong Kong United Oncology Centre, where he was cared for, as well as donors, friends and family who supported his journey.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Environmental NGO urges stronger climate policies as Hong Kong faces extreme summer heat Irene Chan
    An environmental NGO has urged the Hong Kong government to prioritise the climate crisis and strengthen its climate adaptation policies, as the city is expected to endure an extremely hot summer this year. A heatwave in Hong Kong in late May 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP. Friends of the Earth said on Monday that as May drew to a close, Hong Kong and many parts of the world had already experienced mid-summer temperatures ahead of schedule. “Early onset of extreme heat in many parts of the
     

Environmental NGO urges stronger climate policies as Hong Kong faces extreme summer heat

2 June 2026 at 05:10
hot weather featured image

An environmental NGO has urged the Hong Kong government to prioritise the climate crisis and strengthen its climate adaptation policies, as the city is expected to endure an extremely hot summer this year.

A heatwave in Hong Kong in late May 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A heatwave in Hong Kong in late May 2026. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Friends of the Earth said on Monday that as May drew to a close, Hong Kong and many parts of the world had already experienced mid-summer temperatures ahead of schedule.

“Early onset of extreme heat in many parts of the world is a clear warning of the intensifying climate crisis,” the NGO said in the Chinese-language statement.

“We urge the government to put the climate crisis at the top of its agenda, by placing carbon reduction at the core and setting more aggressive emission reduction targets.”

Friends of the Earth
Logo of Friends of the Earth. Photo: Friends of the Earth.

Authorities should make a thorough climate risk assessment, utilising big data, artificial intelligence, and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to analyse the vulnerability of various districts to extreme heat, torrential rain, storm surges, and sea-level rise, the statement said.

The NGO also called on the government to enhance the city’s infrastructure to withstand the climate crisis, including improving coastal flood defence facilities and drainage systems in older districts.

According to the statement, “global warming is making extreme weather more frequent and severe, and the climate crisis already poses a significant threat to public health, economic security, urban resilience, and social justice.”

Friends of the Earth also called for the protection of vulnerable groups, including the elderly, children, people with chronic illnesses, low-income families, homeless people, and those who work outdoors.

El Niño

Hong Kong has endured particularly high temperatures since early last week.

The Hong Kong Observatory (HKO) issued the “very hot weather warning” three times within a week: last Tuesday, Saturday, and Tuesday.

Choy Chun-wing, the HKO’s acting assistant director, said at a press conference on Thursday that Hong Kong would see “hotter than normal” temperatures this year and next year under the influence of climate change and El Niño.

Firefighters clean a drain during a flood in Wong Tai Sin on July 20, 2025, as Typhoon Wipha nears the city. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Firefighters clean a drain during a flood in Wong Tai Sin on July 20, 2025, as Typhoon Wipha nears the city. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific will continue to rise, developing into an El Niño event during the summer and autumn, which will persist at least until the end of this year or the beginning of next year, Choy said.

Scientists have warned that the El Niño weather phenomenon will bring hotter temperatures, stronger storms, drought, and flooding.

Planet warming

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has warned that the intensity and frequency of heatwaves have continued to increase since the 1950s due to human-caused climate change. The prevalence of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide – which trap heat in the atmosphere – raises the planet’s surface temperature, with hotter, longer heatwaves putting lives at risk.

See also: How extreme heat became the deadliest silent killer among world weather disasters

Hong Kong has already warmed by 1.7 degrees Celsius since the Industrial Revolution, research NGO Berkeley Earth says. Heat and humidity may reach lethal levels for protracted periods by the end of the century, according to a 2023 study, making it impossible to stay outdoors in some parts of the world.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hong Kong deploys ‘water-pumping dragon’ machines to clear flooding after heavy rainfall Hans Tse
    Hong Kong authorities have deployed powerful machines known as “water-pumping dragons” to clear flooding after the city’s northern territories were hit by heavy rainfall overnight. The Drainage Services Department deploys a powerful machine known as the “water-pumping dragon” to clear flooding on May 20, 2026. Photo: Drainage Services Department, via Facebook. The Drainage Services Department said on social media early on Thursday that its teams had cleared seven instances of flooding in
     

Hong Kong deploys ‘water-pumping dragon’ machines to clear flooding after heavy rainfall

21 May 2026 at 04:34
Severe flooding after heavy rain hits Hong Kong on May 20, 2026. Photo: HKFP composite.

Hong Kong authorities have deployed powerful machines known as “water-pumping dragons” to clear flooding after the city’s northern territories were hit by heavy rainfall overnight.

The Drainage Services Department deploys a powerful machine known as the "water-pumping dragon" to clear flooding on May 20, 2026. Photo: Drainage Services Department, via Facebook.
The Drainage Services Department deploys a powerful machine known as the “water-pumping dragon” to clear flooding on May 20, 2026. Photo: Drainage Services Department, via Facebook.

The Drainage Services Department said on social media early on Thursday that its teams had cleared seven instances of flooding in the northern part of the New Territories using the devices, which authorities procured from mainland China last year due to more frequent extreme downpours.

The Observatory issued the red rainstorm warning at 2.40am due to heavy rain in the city’s border areas near Shenzhen, especially in Sheung Shui, Ta Kwu Ling, and Sha Tau Kok. A special landslide warning was also issued.

The rainstorm signal was downgraded to amber at 5.15am and eventually cancelled at 9.30am. The weather services warned of the risk of river flooding.

The heavy rain was associated with “upper-air disturbances… persistently affecting the vicinity of the Pearl River Estuary,” the Observatory said on Thursday.

“Locally, more than 50 millimetres of rainfall were recorded over widespread areas this morning, and rainfall even exceeded 100 millimetres over many parts of the New Territories,” it added.

The flooding was concentrated in Sheung Shui and Fanling, while the Shek Kong Airfield Road was also affected, according to the Drainage Services Department.

An emergency control centre was activated at 9.45pm on Wednesday, and 90 response teams were deployed to inspect and clear flooding, the department said.

Images and videos of severe flooding went viral on social media platforms. Clips posted on Threads show floodwater entering a bus in Ping Che and a taxi trapped on the road.

Screenshot of a video shows floodwater entering a bus in Ping Che in Hong Kong in the early hours of May 20, 2026. Photo: t_tsuntsun, via Threads.
Screenshot of a video shows floodwater entering a bus in Ping Che in Hong Kong in the early hours of May 20, 2026. Photo: t_tsuntsun, via Threads.
Screenshot of a video shows a taxi trapped in floodwater in Ping Che, Hong Kong, in the early hours of May 20, 2026. Photo: t_tsuntsun, via Threads.
Screenshot of a video shows a taxi trapped in floodwater in Ping Che, Hong Kong, in the early hours of May 20, 2026. Photo: t_tsuntsun, via Threads.

Last year, after the city hoisted the black rainstorm warning four times within a week, a former Observatory official warned that extreme weather would become more frequent due to the climate crisis.

Public consultation for Hong Kong’s 5-year plan offers golden chance to step up city’s sustainability game

9 May 2026 at 02:00
Basel Kirmani 5-year plan op-ed featured image

It’s doubly exciting to see that Chief Executive John Lee is launching a public consultation for Hong Kong’s inaugural five-year plan.

The first reason for excitement is that we’ve just experienced a pretty well-run public consultation; the recently updated Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan generated a lot of submissions from NGOs, companies, and members of the public.

Chief Executive John Lee
Chief Executive John Lee at a weekly press conference on October 14, 2025. Photo: Tom Grundy/HKFP.

The Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) seems to have done a good job of taking those submissions into account. In short, we’ve seen a proof of concept that public consultations seem to be effective.

The second reason for excitement is that China takes sustainability quite seriously in both word and deed. In aligning with China, the Hong Kong government has a golden opportunity to step up its sustainability game.

The outline of China’s 15th Five-Year Plan is 83 pages long. However, just as a very rough indicator of how seriously the topic is taken, Article 1, Chapter 1, Section 1 includes several comments about the energy transition and pollution.

Sustainability is considered important enough a topic to warrant some space in the prime real estate of those first few paragraphs, rubbing shoulders with big hitters like GDP and life expectancy. 

It might not be very scientific to measure a topic’s importance by which paragraph it lies in, but it is incredibly refreshing to see sustainability topics getting headline treatment instead of being tucked away on page 18.

A Chinese national flag and a Hong Kong SAR flag in the city on September 30, 2025, a day before the People's Republic of China marks 86 years since its founding on October 1, 1949. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A Chinese national flag and a Hong Kong SAR flag in the city. File photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

In a similar vein, the top number in the Key Indicators of Economic and Social Development is GDP. However, in that very same table, there are binding objectives for carbon intensity goals, PM2.5 levels, and forest cover.

I get the sense that these are not just handwaved in order to hit a game of buzzword bingo – something that corporations are frequently guilty of. Rigorous thought has been put into integrating sustainability into the Five-Year Plan.

At the April 21 press conference, when Lee talked about the public consultation for the five-year plan, sustainability, carbon and pollution were not mentioned at all. Of course, GDP growth and the perennial issues of housing and education are all vital issues that need to be addressed.

However, if we’re talking in terms of five-year plans, it’s probably worth noting that in five years from now, the world needs to have carbon emissions at half of what they are today. And that in 25 years from now – just five more five-year plans away! – we need to be at net zero. Sustainability is vital too.

Of course, Hong Kong’s tiny landmass is not home to vast factories, refineries or farms. Most of the carbon that we emit is from producing electricity to power the towers that are our homes and offices.

So while emulating the priority that sustainability is afforded in China’s five-year plan is important, copy-pasting it wholesale would miss important nuance: that Hong Kong’s carbon shadow is much larger than our territorial footprint.

We import almost everything – food, energy, goods, and even water. The spectre of our carbon emissions haunts not only what we consume, but also the vast amounts of financing that flow across the world from our international financial centre.

Hong Kong's Lion Rock is seen behind the densely packed buildings of Kowloon on July 6, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Hong Kong’s Lion Rock is seen behind the densely packed buildings of Kowloon. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Sustainability in Hong Kong is not just about plonking a few solar panels down; it’s a much deeper question about consumption and green finance.

That’s not to diminish the role of sustainability in our own territory; there’s plenty of room for more ambition, not just in carbon but with other forms of pollution.

For example, the Municipal Solid Waste charging scheme’s failure to progress beyond the pilot study means that there’s little push to reduce waste at source.

While it’s true that landfill rates are going down, incineration is going up – in other words, the generation of trash is not slowing down, but is instead just being diverted to the landfill in the sky. That’s not a long-term solution.

I hasten to add that putting sustainability higher on the agenda is not just important for the Hong Kong government. Company boards and executive teams ought to be discussing sustainability during their strategy meetings.

Hopefully, seeing sustainability high on the agenda in the government’s five-year plan will light a fire under corporations to up their sustainability game too.

All told, the idea of a public consultation for Hong Kong’s five-year plan is a wonderful opportunity. Public consultations have a prior form in moving the needle – the Biodiversity Strategy Action Plan has demonstrated that.

And by aligning Hong Kong’s five-year plan with China’s, we can achieve one of the most important things of all – putting sustainability on the agenda.

HKFP is an impartial platform & does not necessarily share the views of opinion writers or advertisers. HKFP presents a diversity of views & regularly invites figures across the political spectrum to write for us. Press freedom is guaranteed under the Basic Law, security law, Bill of Rights and Chinese constitution. Opinion pieces aim to constructively point out errors or defects in the government, law or policies, or aim to suggest ideas or alterations via legal means without an intention of hatred, discontent or hostility against the authorities or other communities.

Hong Kong minister defends hospital decision to send girl home after mother’s death

Bouquets of flowers were laid at Taikoo Shing on June 11, 2026, where a mother and a girl fell to their deaths hours apart on June 10, 2026. Photo: Supplied.

Hong Kong’s welfare minister has defended what he called the “professional judgement” of medical and social workers following the death of a girl shortly after her mother’s.

Bouquets were laid at Taikoo Shing on June 11, 2026, where a mother and a girl fell to their deaths hours apart one day earlier.
Bouquets were laid at Taikoo Shing on June 11, 2026, where a mother and a girl fell to their deaths hours apart one day earlier. Photo: Supplied.

Secretary for Labour and Welfare Chris Sun spoke to reporters on Thursday following a double tragedy involving a 12-year-old girl and her 48-year-old mother, who both fell to their deaths within hours of each other on Wednesday in Taikoo Shing.

“The daughter went to the hospital accompanied by her family” after her mother’s death, Sun said in Cantonese.

“At the hospital, doctors, nurses and social workers met with her, and they had to make a judgement. I understand that they decided [the girl] could go home.”

💡If you are in need of support, please call: The Samaritans 2896 0000 (24-hour, multilingual), Suicide Prevention Centre 2382 0000 or the gov’t mental health hotline on 18111. The Hong Kong Society of Counselling and Psychology provides a WhatsApp hotline in English and Chinese: 6218 1084. See also: HKFP’s mental health services guide.

Sun said it was understandable that there were concerns about whether it was suitable to allow the girl to return home.

The daughter was accompanied by family members when she was assessed at the hospital and returned home, Sun added.

“I believe the doctors, nurses and social workers had made the decision [to let her go home] at that time based on their professional judgement.”

He said he refrained from commenting further as the police were investigating the double tragedy.

The mother, a social worker with the Social Welfare Department, was found dead on the podium of their residential block around 9.24am after she reportedly had an argument with her daughter about “educational issues,” according to local media.

At 7.21pm, roughly 10 hours later, police were notified of the fall of the daughter at the same address. The girl was certified dead at the scene.

Bouquets were laid at Taikoo Shing on June 11, 2026, where a mother and a girl fell to their deaths hours apart one day earlier.
Bouquets were laid at Taikoo Shing on June 11, 2026, where a mother and a girl fell to their deaths hours apart one day earlier. Photo: Supplied.

Sun urged people to give the family space and respect their privacy at the moment of tragedy, saying that authorities sought to provide immediate support to the father and other family members.

Edward To, director of social welfare, said at the same press conference that government social workers had visited the father following the incident.

Bouquets were seen at the scene at Taikoo Shing following the tragedy, as residents paid tribute to the mother and daughter.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • IKEA Tsim Sha Tsui store pulls frozen dessert after bacteria exceed safety limits Hillary Leung
    IKEA’s Tsim Sha Tsui outlet has halted sales of a frozen dessert item after a food safety test found that its level of coliform bacteria exceeded the standard limit. The food section at IKEA in K11 Art Mall in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Google Maps. The Food and Environmental Hygiene Department said in a statement on Tuesday night that the Centre for Food Safety (CFS) conducted tests on a frozen confection sample from a “licensed frozen confection factory in Tsim Sha Tsui” as part of routine c
     

IKEA Tsim Sha Tsui store pulls frozen dessert after bacteria exceed safety limits

13 May 2026 at 04:51
IKEA TST

IKEA’s Tsim Sha Tsui outlet has halted sales of a frozen dessert item after a food safety test found that its level of coliform bacteria exceeded the standard limit.

The food section at IKEA in K11 Art Mall in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Google Maps.
The food section at IKEA in K11 Art Mall in Tsim Sha Tsui. Photo: Google Maps.

The Food and Environmental Hygiene Department said in a statement on Tuesday night that the Centre for Food Safety (CFS) conducted tests on a frozen confection sample from a “licensed frozen confection factory in Tsim Sha Tsui” as part of routine checks.

Tests found that the sample contained 240 coliform bacteria per gram, more than twice the legal limit of 100 coliform bacteria per gram.

The frozen dessert was sold at the food section of Swedish furniture giant IKEA’s Tsim Sha Tsui store, located in K11 Art Mall.

“The CFS has informed the frozen confection factory concerned of the irregularity and instructed it to stop selling and to dispose [of] all the affected frozen confection immediately,” the statement read.

Food and Environmental Hygiene Department. File photo: GovHK Facebook.
Food and Environmental Hygiene Department. File photo: GovHK.

A group of bacteria found in digestive tracts and soil, coliforms in food can suggest contamination. They are usually present in small numbers in items such as raw milk, meat, poultry or other raw foods.

While mostly harmless, high levels of coliforms indicate unsanitary conditions or poor hygiene practices during food production, according to the CFS.

The CFS added that while the coliform count shows hygiene conditions were “unsatisfactory,” it did not mean consumption would cause food poisoning.

HKFP has reached out to IKEA for comment.

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • Hong Kong International Airport 6th most polluting hub in the world, 2nd in Asia-Pacific Tom Grundy
    Hong Kong International Airport is among the top polluting hubs in the world, a UK thinktank has found. Travellers in the Hong Kong International Airport. Photo: GovHK. On Wednesday, new data from global affairs thinktank ODI Global ranked Hong Kong’s airport as the world’s sixth most polluting in terms of flight CO2 emissions, and second in Asia-Pacific. The study, based on 2023 data from the International Council on Clean Transportation, concluded that the fossil-fuel dependent avia
     

Hong Kong International Airport 6th most polluting hub in the world, 2nd in Asia-Pacific

14 May 2026 at 09:47
polluting hk airport

Hong Kong International Airport is among the top polluting hubs in the world, a UK thinktank has found.

Travellers in the Hong Kong International Airport. Photo: GovHK.
Travellers in the Hong Kong International Airport. Photo: GovHK.

On Wednesday, new data from global affairs thinktank ODI Global ranked Hong Kong’s airport as the world’s sixth most polluting in terms of flight CO2 emissions, and second in Asia-Pacific.

The study, based on 2023 data from the International Council on Clean Transportation, concluded that the fossil-fuel dependent aviation sector would be the fifth-largest emitter if it were a country.

Hong Kong emitted 15.1 million tonnes of CO2, and saw 138,764 flights, in 2023.

Seoul was Asia-Pacific’s most polluting airport, responsible for 16.8 million tonnes of CO2 emissions in 2023. Dubai topped the global ranking with 23.2 million tonnes of CO2, followed by London’s Heathrow.

The 20 cities with the highest airport emissions
The 20 cities with the highest airport emissions. Chart: ODI Global.

The research also showed that Hong Kong’s airport was a significant source of local pollutants – it ranks ninth in the world, emitting 4,572 tonnes of nitrogen oxides in 2023.

The thinktank warned against reliance on so-called “sustainable” aviation fuels to bring down emissions, citing “high production costs and price premiums, limited policy support, weak long-term offtake commitments, bankability challenges and constraints on feedstock availability and sustainability.”

It also said that jet fuel emissions are predicted to increase and eat up future carbon budget: “The sector’s own high-growth scenario projects passenger demand could increase by 3.3% annually, from 9.0 trillion revenue passenger-kilometers (RPKs) in 2024 to 21.9 trillion RPKs in 2050. Between now and 2050, aviation is projected to consume 15% of the remaining carbon budget associated with 1.7ºC of warming.”

HKFP has reached out to the Environmental Protection Department and the Airport Authority for comment.

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