The safety of drinking water and preventing pollution in the
Songhua River will be a top priority of the government in Northeast
China's Jilin Province over the next five years.
The province will try to ensure a supply of safe drinking water
by building 30 sewage treatment plants along the river, said Wang
Min, governor of Jilin Province, at a recent meeting.
Songhua River flows in 70 per cent of the province. It is also
the main source of drinking water in Harbin, the capital of our
neighbor Heilongjiang Province.
"It is our mother river and concerns the health and everyday
lives of almost 20 million residents along the river," said Li Bin,
vice -governor of Jilin Province, speaking at the meeting. He is in
charge of environmental protection in Jilin.
Meanwhile, several other projects will also tackle water
pollution in the province over the five years, added Governor Wang
Min.
According to Jilin Provincial Construction Department, a
200-kilometre-long sewage pipeline has been completed across three
cities along the river Jilin, Songyuan and Yanji and will be in
service at the end of this year after the building of three water
treatment plants.
The plants cost over 1 billion yuan (US$125 million).
Jilin Province has a current daily sewage water disposal
capacity of 550,000 tons, far behind the demands of the
province.
With a daily disposal capacity of 450,000 tons altogether, the
three plants will be able to treat about 60 per cent of the sewage
water in the three cities upon completion.
Government officials said residents' demands will be met in full
when the 30 plants are built in the next five years.
In addition, companies in the province that discharge waste
water directly into the river without processing will face either a
suspension of business or closure.
"We urge all polluting chemical companies along the Songhua
River to be relocated," added Governor Wang Min.
(China Daily October 12, 2006)
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