Fears of spring floods on the Yellow
River have prompted authorities in Shandong
Province to take preventive measures.
Recent low temperatures have led to
a heavy buildup of ice along 233 kilometers of the river in the
eastern province, sources from the Shandong Yellow River Anti-Flood
Office said.
The length accounts for more than a
third of the 628-kilometer section of the river in Shandong, the
last province the river flows through before it empties into the
Bohai Sea. All of Shandong's rivers are now frozen, most with ice
up to 30 centimeters thick.
At Dongying, near the river's mouth,
70 percent of the water was covered with ice on Monday.
"Everything is under control now.
Continued cold weather will thicken the ice layer and freeze up
more sections. But everything is safe as far as we know, and
serious floods are unlikely to occur," said Liu Hongcai, an
official with the anti-flood office.
But the situation could change when
the thaw begins in spring, especially when the temperature rises
and ice thaws in the upper reaches while the lower reaches are
still frozen. There is a possibility of an ice dam forming, cutting
off the flow of water and creating a flood.
The anti-flood office says that the
province has mobilized more than 450,000 people to deal with the
situation if it arises.
They have checked and repaired all
preventive facilities and have been trained in dealing with ice
floods. Explosives have been prepared in case ice blockages need to
be blasted away.
The Yellow River, China's second
largest river, originates in Qinghai Province. It then flows
through Gansu, Ningxia, Inner Mongolia, Shaanxi, Shanxi and Henan
before traversing Shandong and emptying into the sea.
The river passes through six major
cities in Shandong -- Liaocheng, Dezhou, Jinan, Binzhou, Zibo and
Dongying -- all of which must brace themselves for potential ice
flooding each year.
(China Daily January 18,
2005)
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