Drought has prevented spring planting on more than a
million hectares and continues to threaten people and live stock in
both Hebei Province near Beijing and Hainan Province far to the south.
Hebei's Bureau of Water
Resources said the province has had an average monthly rainfall of
just 13 millimeters since last November, a third less than
normal.
This spring crops were not planted on 1.47 million
hectares of farmland for lack of irrigation, said the provincial
bureau of agriculture.
Some 380,000 people in the province have been
suffering from a shortage of drinking water.
About 1.7 billion cu m of water is available for
irrigation this spring, 500 million cu m less than a year ago. On
the tropical island of Hainan Province, 191,000 people and 52,000
heads of livestock are coping with water shortages, say sources
from Hainan Provincial Office of Drought Control.
More than 89,300 hectares of crops have been affected
by the drought.
More than 370 reservoirs and ponds have been dried up
across Hainan, which is a major agricultural base. Thirteen other
reservoirs have dropped to the lowest marker.
There has been no runoff in 21 rivers in the
southwestern part of Hainan, said Wang Zhenxing, deputy director of
the Hainan office.
The Ministry of Finance and the State Flood Control
and Drought Relief Headquarters have allotted 28 million yuan
(US$3.63) to Hainan to help alleviate the affects of the drought.
The province has contributed 39 million yuan (US$5.05) to the
effort.
Local government officials are helping farmers grow
drought-resistant crops and implement water conservation
measures.
(Xinhua News Agency April 13, 2007)
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