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China turns to salt water to ease drought
BEIJING—Drought-stricken
China, where hundreds of millions of people are without regular access
to drinking water, is turning to desalinated sea water to help end the
crisis, the government said on Tuesday.
Apart from widespread drought, factories have ignored pollution hazards
and dumped toxic industrial waste into rivers and lakes in China, home
to one-fifth of the world’s population but only 7 percent of its water
resources. “China is expected to desalinate 800,000 to 1 million cubic
metres of sea water per day and use 55 billion cubic metres annually by
2010,” the National Development and Reform Commission said, detailing
China’s ninth five-year plan. China desalinated 120,000 cubic metres of
sea water per day last year. It was not immediately clear how China,
which is also desperately short of fuel, would power the energy-hungry
desalination plants.
More than 600 medium- and large-sized cities in China were now suffering
“serious water shortages”, Water Resources Minister Wang Shucheng said
this month. China is investing billions in a project to transfer water
from its lush south to the arid north. The so-called western route of
the project could involve harnessing rivers cascading from the Tibetan
highlands in the Himalayas to quench the thirst of Qinghai province and
other poor western areas.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |