China unveils action plan to protect, restore Yangtze River


BEIJING - China has unveiled an action plan to protect and restore the Yangtze River as the country pushes forward environmental protection.
Water quality of more than 85 percent of Yangtze River segments should reach Level III standard or above by the end of 2020, according to the plan released jointly by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment (MEE) and National Development and Reform Commission.
It also said more than 90 percent of "black and odorous" water bodies in cities at or above prefecture level in the Yangtze River economic belt should be eliminated by the end of 2020.
Regions along the river in 11 provinces and municipalities are set as key areas, the plan said.
It also listed eight major tasks on Yangtze River protection including strengthening industrial, agricultural and shipping pollution treatment, ensuring safety of drinking water source quality and cracking down on ecological destruction.
The protection and renovation of the Yangtze River, the country's longest waterway, should combine water pollution treatment, water ecology restoration and water resources protection, the MEE said.
China classifies water quality in major rivers and lakes into six levels, ranging from Level I, which is good enough to be used as the source of drinking water, to Level VI which is too polluted to be used even for farm irrigation.
- Global influencers explore beer city at Qingdao WCNA
- Heavy rainstorm leaves three dead, four missing in Hebei resort
- Ethnic integration on the grassland
- China renews alerts for rainstorms, high temperature
- Beijing restores power, communications, water-supply to flood-hit villages
- Helicopter sightseeing project takes off over Wuliangsu Lake