Underground water in 57 percent of
monitoring sites across Chinese cities have been found polluted or
extremely polluted, the Economic Information Daily, a newspaper run by
Xinhua News Agency, reported on Monday, quoting figures from the
Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP).
The MEP statistics also suggest that 298 million rural residents do not have access to safe drinking water.
In the first half of last year, of the
seven main water systems in China, only the Yangtze and Pearl rivers had
good water quality, and the Haihe River in north China was heavily
polluted, with the others all moderately polluted, according to the MEP.
To address poor water quality, the MEP has decided to beef up protection of water sources.
The ministry told the Economic
Information Daily that no construction projects will be allowed in water
source regions unless they had set aside specific protection areas
subject to the ministry's monitoring, or they had passed water quality
examinations.
Ma Jun, head of Beijing-based Institute
of Public and Environmental Affairs, said that drinking water sources,
usually located in underdeveloped upstream regions, tended to be places
of heavy industry, such as mining and petrochemical industries.
China recently unveiled the 2011-2015
guideline on fighting water pollution in which it stated the goal that
60 percent of the country's major rivers and lakes should be clean
enough to be sources of drinking water supply by the end of 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment