"This year's drought is very severe, and now 800,000 people is
facing shortage of drinking water and more than 7 million mu (15 mu
= 1 hectare) of corps have withered away. The whole province has
suffered an economic loss over 10 billion yuan, and we will rush to
Beijing to report the condition to the central authority, and ask
for help", said an engineer from the local drought relief office.
The drought, which lasted from summer to autumn, has affected over
80 percent farmland of the whole province, causing temporary
drinking difficulties for 3.66 million people and 1.04 million
heads of livestock and forcing more than 800,000 people to buy
water or carry it from far away. The Jining section of the
Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal has closed to navigation nearly 60
days, leaving millions of tons coal waiting to be shipped out. A
batch of major reservoirs and lakes all dried up and the Binzhou
City is facing a crisis of water shortage.
Besides, the drought also caused a series of problems threatening
the ecological environment of the province, including worsened
pollution, salinization and invasion of seawater.
Now the main rain season has passed and there is little chance for
effective, large-scale raining, a provincial government official
told. All projects across the province only hold 3.6 billion cubic
meters of water, no more than half of that of previous years.
The level of underground water dropped continuously and 210,000
wells didn't yield enough water and, nearly 60,000 motor-pumped
wells were simply empty. Water volume can be drawn from the Yellow
River was currently reduced to 500 million cubic meters, against
the total provincial holding capacity of 2.7 billion cubic meters.
While 1.9 billion cubic meters are urgently needed for drought
relief along the Yellow River and another 2.7 billion cubic meters
are needed for autumn seeding.
(People’s Daily
September 19, 2002)
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