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Beijing Begins Unprecedented Covid Testing of Millions of Residents

Nearly 20 million people will undergo three rounds of Covid testing through the weekend.

Beijing Begins Unprecedented Covid Testing of Millions of Residents
A woman gets swabbed for a Covid-19 test in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Gilles Sabrie/Bloomberg)

Beijing started mass testing millions of its residents as part of an unprecedented scheme designed to identify and squash omicron’s stealthy spread before it spirals out of control in the Chinese capital. 

Nearly 20 million people will undergo three rounds of Covid testing through the weekend as Beijing’s municipal government expands the effort that started in the eastern Chaoyang district, where most cases in the recent flareup have emerged. The broader testing will encompass 10 other administrative districts and an economic development zone, which houses the headquarters for the e-commerce giant JD.com Inc. and other high-tech firms.

Beijing Begins Unprecedented Covid Testing of Millions of Residents

The scale of the program is unparalleled in Beijing, even as China has kept Covid in check since early 2020 thanks in large part to massive testing efforts that repeatedly spotted tiny incursions of the pathogen in the world’s most populous country. The arrival of the more infectious omicron variant has managed to penetrate the defenses of several cities and led to lockdowns like the one in Shanghai, an outcome authorities in Beijing hope to avoid. 

The urgency underscores the importance of figuring out how long and how broadly omicron has been spreading in the sprawling city, and devising a way to cut off those chains of transmission. The city on Monday locked down parts of the Chaoyang district, home to many expatriates, most foreign embassies and the central business districts. 

Mass testing of 3.78 million people in Chaoyang turned up five potential positive people, with an additional analysis underway to confirm any infections. There were 22 new Covid cases reported throughout Beijing in the previous 24 hours, officials said at a briefing on Tuesday. 

Beijing Jitters

The mass testing and Shanghai’s experience have caused jitters in Beijing about a potential wider lockdown, as such sweeping restrictions are now being implemented more frequently to control Covid outbreaks caused by the hyper-infectious omicron variants. Currently more than 50 million people in China are under lockdown. 

Beijing Begins Unprecedented Covid Testing of Millions of Residents

Chief among them are the 25 million people in the financial hub of Shanghai, most of whom have endured almost a month-long home confinement and struggled with food shortages and limited access to health care. The lingering lockdown has led to a growing public outcry against the harsh containment efforts that are part of a so-called Covid Zero strategy, an approach most of the world abandoned once they accepted that the virus was endemic.

While daily infections are dropping in Shanghai, down to 16,980 on Monday from more than 27,000 a day previously, deaths have started to mount. They reached nearly 200 as of Tuesday, mostly claiming the city’s elderly who have underlying ailments. 

Beijing Begins Unprecedented Covid Testing of Millions of Residents

Lockdowns are still popping up elsewhere as local officials impose stricter measures at an earlier stage to avoid descending into a Shanghai-style crisis, though total cases across China are no longer rising. 

Restrictions in some far-flung areas could disrupt various stages of the global supply chain. Baotou, a city of 2.7 million in Inner Mongolia, sealed downtown residential compounds and ordered work to be halted at most companies after it detected two cases since Sunday. Manzhouli, a smaller city in the same region, is also in lockdown. 

Inner Mongolia is China’s second-biggest coal hub, with its miners doubling down in recent months to meet Beijing’s edict to churn out the fuel to insulate the country against soaring energy costs. The prospects for rare earths disruptions will also be closely watched, with Baotou City China’s largest source of the elements used in everything from electric vehicles to military hardware. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg