Beijing residents will be provided with 1 billion cubic meters
of water from the Yangtze River every year starting in 2010 to ease
the city's shortage in drinking water, accounting for 25 percent of
its total water supply, China Business News reported
Thursday.
The city will carry out several measures to ensure its water
supply, especially during the 2008 Olympic Games, including
imposing fees for water resources in the agricultural industry,
said Bi Xiaogang, deputy director of the Municipal Water Affairs
Bureau.
Bi said the 1 billion cubic meters of water won't influence the
ecological environment and the water reserve in the Yangtze
River.
The city's water mainly comes from Miyun Reservoir and Guanting
Reservoir in the northern region. From 2002, it began an emergency
project to introduce water from Hebei Province, as part of the massive
south-to-north water diversion project. Hebei reservoir can offer
Beijing 300 million cubic meters of water from 2008.
The south-to-north water diversion project, which began in
December 2002, will channel water from the Yangtze, China's longest
river, to the country's drought-affected north via eastern, central
and western routes.
"It may affect Hebei's economic development as the province has
to provide water to Beijing and Tianjin, so Beijing will help it
develop by offering money and issuing preferential policies," Bi
said.
Hu Bo, an official of the bureau, said Beijing needs up to 2.42
million tons of water every day in 2005, and the current facilities
can offer 2.75 million tons of water, which will fall short of the
needs during the Olympic Games.
Beijing Waterworks Group will renovate and enlarge its three
biggest water plants in Beijing by the end of 2007, with an
investment of 500 million yuan (US$62.5 million).
"By then, the water supply can reach 3 million tons every day,"
Hu said.
(Shanghai Daily June 30, 2006)
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