{"id":6574,"date":"2006-03-16T13:17:31","date_gmt":"2006-03-16T20:17:31","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2006\/03\/16\/china-fights-against-pollution-to-ensure-drinking-water-safety-xinhuanet\/"},"modified":"2006-03-16T13:17:31","modified_gmt":"2006-03-16T20:17:31","slug":"china-fights-against-pollution-to-ensure-drinking-water-safety-xinhuanet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2006\/03\/china-fights-against-pollution-to-ensure-drinking-water-safety-xinhuanet\/","title":{"rendered":"China fights against pollution to ensure drinking water safety – Xinhuanet"},"content":{"rendered":"
To safeguard it’s supply of safe drinking water, a province in China seeks to pass a tough environmental law and prosecute pollluters.<\/p>\n
GUANGDONG, March 16, Xinhuanet (Link) <\/a> The legislature of southern Guangdong Province, an economic engine of China, is creating a law to protect its supply of drinking water. Guangdong Province via Wickipedia <\/a> The province has built a lot of sewage treatment plants in recent years, the waste water discharge volume has risen. A chain of major environmental hazards have also worsened the water quality in urban cities, said Gu. To safeguard it’s supply of safe drinking water, a province in China seeks to pass a tough environmental law and prosecute pollluters. GUANGDONG, March 16, Xinhuanet (Link) The legislature of southern Guangdong Province, an economic engine of China, is creating a law to protect its supply of drinking water. A draft of the law will […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":74,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[132],"tags":[5955,2823,302,174],"class_list":["post-6574","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-environmental-crisis","tag-guangdong","tag-policy","tag-pollution","tag-water","et-doesnt-have-format-content","et_post_format-et-post-format-standard"],"yoast_head":"\n
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\nA draft of the law will be discussed in the Guangdong Provincial People’s Congress in August and there is no time to delay in ensuring the safety of drinking water through legal means, said Yuan Zheng, deputy director of the Environment and Resources Protection Committee under the congress.
\nThis fate is not exceptional in China. As the world’s largest developing nation, China is suffering from an increasingly serious crisis in drinking water safety as it has made rapid economic development.
\nMore than 70 percent of China’s rivers and lakes are polluted to varying extent, said Gu Hao, spokesman for the Ministry of Water Resources. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n
\nWater Pollution via Wikipedia<\/a><\/p>\n
\nTo provide clean drinking water is the top priority of the Chinese government’s efforts to protect water resources and the ministry plans to start with water pollution control, said Gu.
\nThe dry climate and special geologic conditions endanger water safety in some areas, while, for more areas, pollution is the ‘arch-foe’ of drinking water,” said Gu.<\/p>\n
\nwater supply of Harbin, northeast China, was shut down for four days last November after about 4 million people were affected after the Songhua River incurred serious pollution because of a chemical plant spill upstream.
\nthan one month later, a spill of more than 1,000 tons of heavy cadmium contaminated water from a smelting plant in Guangdong polluted the Beijiang River, reducing the water supply for more than 20 towns and cities.
\nto the cities, the water safety situation is more worrying in China’s vast rural areas with over two thirds of the country’s population, Gu acknowledged.
\nMore than 300 million people in rural areas do not have adequate clean drinking water and hundreds of thousands of Chinese are afflicted with various diseases from drinking water that contains too much fluorine, arsenic, sodium sulfate or bitter salt, said the spokesman.
\nThis cruel reality of water safety has aroused the attention of the Chinese government. President Hu Jintao has instructed local and provincial governments to put drinking water resources protection on top of their agendas.
\nspent 2 billion yuan (about 250 million U. S. dollars) tohelp 11 million members of the rural population access to drinking water in 2005 and the input would be doubled this year with another 20 million farmers expected to have safe water to drink, said Gu.
\nThis would lower the population faced with drinking water problems to a third by 2010 and ensure safe drinking water for every one by 2020, said Gu.
\nTo hit the target, the government will provide guarantee investment for project construction,” Gu said. “The ministry will map out a comprehensive plan and put it into practice this year.”
\naddition, large-scale pollution control work was carried out on major rivers.
\ndischarge of waste will be curbed, sewage treatment facilities will be improved and those responsible for the majority of the pollution will be closed down, said Zhou Shengxian, head of the State Environmental Protection Administration.
\nMore than 700 engineering staff from the Ministry of Water Resources are probing the pollution of drinking water sources in Guangdong to provide first-hand information for local government to carry out proper water sources management, said Yuan Zheng.
\n“The activities leading to water pollution are crimes and should receive due penalty,” he said.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"