Qinghai Province, the original source of the Yangtze, Lancang and
Yellow rivers, has succeeded in using artificial rain to widen the
upper reaches of the Yellow River.
The 6.1 billion cubic meters of artificial rain added in the past
five years has made the slim river wider than before.
The Yellow River, the second longest in China, originates in
northwest China's Qinghai Province and passes through nine
provinces and autonomous regions, with a total length of 5,464
kilometers. The upper reaches of the river refers to the 1,500-km
section between the river source and Longyang Gorge Power Station
in Qinghai.
Since 1990, sustained drought has caused a sharp decrease of water
flow on its upper reaches, drying some sections on the lower
reaches, affecting the economic expansion of the river valley.
According to statistics, the river dried up for 129 days in 1996
and for 222 days in 1997. The Longyang Gorge Reservoir stored only
5.7 billion cubic meters of water in 1997, though it has a storage
capacity of 24.7 billion cubic meters. The reservoir had to cut its
annual power generation by half as a result of the low water
level.
Qinghai, with high elevation and large pieces of marshland, is
ideal for producing rainfall on the upper reaches of the Yellow
River, a meteorologist said.
The provincial government of Qinghai will invest an additional 5.5
million yuan (US$662,650) in creating artificial rain this year to
expand the rain-covered area from 50,000 square kilometers to
150,000 square kilometers.
(Xinhua News Agency September 24, 2002)
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