Chinese workers deliver drinking water to a housing estate in Beijing
February 26, 2011. A record drought across China would not impact
global food prices, with the country expected to meet its food demand
from "abundant reserves," according to government officials.
UPI/Stephen Shaver
China faces worsening water shortages, a government official warned.
The country's water shortages, along with serious river pollution and
a deteriorating aquatic ecosystem, pose a growing threat to economic
and social development, Hu Siyi, China's vice minister of water
resources said Thursday, state-run news agency Xinhua reports.
China's population of 1.3 billion people consumes more than 600
billion cubic meters of water a year, equal to about three-quarters of
its exploitable water resources, Hu said.
"The constraints of our available water resources become more apparent day by day."
New guidelines released Thursday by the State Council -- China's
Cabinet -- cap the maximum volume of water use at 700 billion cubic
meters by 2030.
Other measures include stricter government supervision of underground
water supplies, greater protection of drinking water sources and the
introduction of water-use licenses and other steps aimed at restoring
the aquatic ecosystem.
"The situation is extremely serious in many areas. With
over-development, water use has already surpassed what our natural
resources can bear," Hu warned.
About two-thirds of Chinese cities are short of water and nearly 300
million rural dwellers have no access to safe drinking water. Overall,
China faces a national water shortage of more than 50 billion cubic
meters on average a year.
"If we don't take strong and firm measures, it will be hard to
reverse the severe shortages and daily exacerbation of the water
situation," Hu said.
Ma Jun, director of China's Institute of Public and Environmental
Affairs, a non-government organization protection agency, acknowledged
the government's efforts to address the problem but said its policies
have failed to curb growing demand for water.
No comments:
Post a Comment