Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




WATER WORLD
Pollution plagues China's mega water diversion project
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Jul 30, 2013


The Danjiangkou Reservoir marks the beginning of the project's middle route and is expected to start supplying water to the north by 2014.

A crucial water source for China's massive water diversion project, the Danjiangkou Reservoir, is facing problems with pollution, says a local government official.

The South-North Water Diversion Project aims to transfer 1,582 billion cubic feet of water annually from the country's water-rich south to drought-prone northern China.

The project, expected to cost $81 billion, is considered the biggest engineering endeavor in Chinese history, and involves a mix of canals, tunnels and aqueducts spanning thousands of miles across the country. Sans pumps, it will rely entirely on gravity to run water from the south's higher elevations, to the north.

The Danjiangkou Reservoir marks the beginning of the project's middle route and is expected to start supplying water to the north by 2014.

A water pollution plan issued by the State Council, or China's cabinet requires that the water quality for all five rivers that flow into the Danjiangkou meet a "grade III" standard by 2015.

But four of those rivers are now rated "grade V," deemed for "agricultural use only" and the fifth river is considered "grade IV," for "industrial use only," reports China's state-run news agency Xinhua.

"The target is very unlikely to be met as many pollution control projects lag behind schedule due to a fund shortage," said Cheng Jiagang, vice mayor of Shiyan in Hubei province.

The local government is short of $486 million needed for a sewage treatment program to clean up the rivers so the "grade III" target can be achieved, including 687 miles of sewage pipelines to collect all waste water, Cheng said.

As part of its effort to improve the pollution problem, Shiyan has shut down 329 factories in the last few years, but that has cut its revenues by $130 million annually, he said.

Meantime, 1.3 million tons of waste water is discharged directly into the five rivers each day.

"The task is arduous and urgent," said Zhou Ji, the Communist Party chief of Shiyan. "We hope the general public, particularly the beneficiaries in the northern areas, will take note of our challenges."

Zhou told the newspaper a compensation mechanism should be established for the area whereby the northern regions that will benefit from the water diversion project help fund the needed environmental protection, as well as to improve the livelihood of 180,000 villagers who were relocated.

A report in The Epoch Times earlier this month noted as part of the scheme to divert water to northern China, both the middle and eastern routes of the project "will cross many polluted, dead fish and sewage-ridden channels and multiple hot spots for cancerous outbreaks."

.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








WATER WORLD
Global warming to cut snow water storage 56 percent in Oregon watershed
Corvallis OR (SPX) Jul 31, 2013
A new report projects that by the middle of this century there will be an average 56 percent drop in the amount of water stored in peak snowpack in the McKenzie River watershed of the Oregon Cascade Range - and that similar impacts may be found on low-elevation maritime snow packs around the world. The findings by scientists at Oregon State University, which are based on a projected 3.6 de ... read more


WATER WORLD
Americans continue to use more renewable energy sources

Sweden's Vattenfall hit by $4.6-bn charge as energy demand plunges

Six Tech Advancements Changing the Fossil Fuels Game

Free market is best way to combat climate change

WATER WORLD
Sixteen arrested at British anti-fracking protest

Direct nitrogen fixation for low cost energy conversion

Myanmar-China gas pipeline starts flowing: company

Blast halts Iraq oil exports to Turkey

WATER WORLD
SOWITEC Mexico - strengthening its permitted project pipeline

Sky Harvest To Acquire Vertical Axis Wind Turbine Technology And Manufacturing Facilities

Wind Energy: Components Certification Helps Reduce Costs

Wind power does not strongly affect greater prairie chickens

WATER WORLD
The best of two worlds: Solar hydrogen production breakthrough

KYOCERA and Century Tokyo To Operate Utility-Scale Solar Power Plants

EU, China settle solar panel dispute

UCLA researchers double efficiency of novel solar cell

WATER WORLD
Japan nuclear watchdog to beef up Fukushima monitoring

Nuke experts blast Fukushima operator over leaks

Westinghouse and Vitkovice Take First Concrete Steps Towards Building Czech AP1000 Reactors

Rejected environmental report could delay Turkey's first nuke plant

WATER WORLD
Microbial Who-Done-It For Biofuels

Microorganisms found in salt flats could offer new path to green hydrogen fuel

CSU researchers explore creating biofuels through photosynthesis

Drought response identified in potential biofuel plant

WATER WORLD
China launches three experimental satellites

Medical quarantine over for Shenzhou-10 astronauts

China's astronauts ready for longer missions

Chinese probe reaches record height in space travel

WATER WORLD
Tropical ecosystems regulate variations in Earth's carbon dioxide levels

Cost of Arctic methane release could be 'size of global economy'

Shifting patterns of temperature volatility in the climate system

Scientists discover new variability in iron supply to the oceans with climate implications




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement