China faces a tougher situation in water resources in
the future as demand increases amid the country's rapid
industrialization and urbanization, an official said Thursday at a press
conference.
Hu Siyi, vice minister of water resources, said water shortages,
serious river pollution and the deteriorating aquatic ecology are "quite
outstanding" and may threaten the country's sustainable growth.
With a population of 1.3 billion people, China now consumes more than
600 billion cubic meters of water a year, or about three-quarters of
its exploitable water resources, Hu said.
"Because of the grave situation, we must put in place the strictest water resources management system," he said.
According to the Ministry of Water Resources, the average per capita
of water resources is only 2,100 cubic meters annually, or about 28
percent of the world's average level.
About two-thirds of Chinese cities are water-needy, while nearly 300
million rural residents lack access to safe drinking water, leading to a
national water shortage of over 50 billion cubic meters on average
every year, Hu noted.
The ministry's data showed that 40 percent of Chinese rivers were
seriously polluted and unfit for drinking after 75 billion tonnes of
sewage and waste water were discharged in 2010.
Moreover, about one-fifth of the rivers are so polluted that their
water quality is rated Category V. China rates its water quality from
Category I to Category V, with Category V being too toxic even to touch.
Adding to the country's water safety pressure are ambitious
development plans announced by local governments this year, which
experts say will inevitably greatly increase water demand for industrial
and residential use.
"Unless we take decisive and compulsory measures to stop the
over-exploitation activities, the water shortage will get worse in the
future," Hu said.
To address the problem, the State Council, or China's cabinet,
unveiled a guideline on Thursday to regulate the use of water under "the
strictest criteria," capping the maximum volume of water use at 700
billion cubic meters by the end of 2030.
According to the guideline, China will work to keep its total volume of water use below 670 billion cubic meters in 2020.
Also, the government will tighten its supervision over exploitation
of underground water, further protect sources of drinking water, and
restore the aquatic ecological system by introducing water-use licenses
and other measures.
The central government has planned 4 trillion yuan (634.9 billion
U.S. dollars) of investment in water resources conservation projects
over the next 10 years, of which 1.8 trillion yuan will be invested
during the 2011-2015 period.
Zhou Xuewen, chief planner with the Ministry of Water Resources, said
he expects investment in water conservation projects in 2012 to exceed
last year's 345.2 billion yuan, of which more than 140 billion yuan will
be funded by the central government.
"It will be our top priority to ensure safe and adequate water supply for residential use," Zhou added.
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