Water shortage has become the top problem facing
China's rapid urbanization, as around two-thirds of its 661 cities
suffer from this issue, according to the Ministry of Water
Resources.
Among over 400 cities with water shortage problems,
about 100 are in deep trouble, lacking enough water to support
people's lives and industrial operations.
Worse, water pollution has rarified clean water. Over
70 billion tons of wastewater was released last year, with 45
billion tons pumped into lakes and rivers untreated.
Ministry figures show that 90 percent of surface
runoff in the country is polluted.
The ministry issued a regulation recently that called
for urban water affairs work to be strengthened to meet the
increasing demands of speedy urban development, according to China
News Agency.
The work should focus on controlling excessive urban
development and avoiding high water-consumption industries as well
as large-scale artificial water landscapes.
Groundwater needs to be exploited in a sustainable
way, according to the regulation which also demands early warning
and emergency systems for urban water crises.
Ministry figures showed that among some 600 cities at
risk from floods, only 40 percent have flood defenses meeting
national standards.
The ministry, in the regulation, has resorted to
market-driven water pricing to cure its water shortage
headache.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC)
released a new regulation on the supervision of water pricing on
November 13 to clarify what can and cannot be included in the cost
of water supply.
The NDRC regulation suggested that the price of water
be based on the cost of water supply, comprising the costs of
tapping water resources, providing running water, constructing
pipes and treating sewage.
(China Daily November 24,
2006)
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