Water conservancy construction
(Xinhua) Updated: 2006-10-15 09:19
Officials with southwest China's Sichuan Province and Chongqing Municipality
made pledges at an ongoing conference about drought relief that they will
strengthen the water conservancy construction "at all costs" to avoid the
recurrence of the abject droughts torturing the two places this
summer.
In the next few years, Chongqing will invest more money in the
infrastructure construction of farmland water conservancy and complete the
construction of a drought monitoring and forecast system, said Liao Daiyu, vice
head of the city's flood control and drought relief office.
The official
added that the office will also work on how to utilize the limited water
resources in a more efficient way when the area is hit by a drought
again.
The neighboring Sichuan Province also promised a large scale water
conservancy construction before the next summer. Besides, they will implement a
project to collect rainwater for farm and drought relief use, said an official
with the provincial water resource department.
Yet the official said the
largest problem they are facing now is fund shortage.
Every year, the
fund shortage in Sichuan's water conservancy construction is about 1.2 billion
yuan (about 150 million U.S. dollars) on the average, the official
said.
This directly resulted in a great loss in this summer's severe
drought in Sichuan.
More than 110 counties in the province were tortured
by the three-month drought this summer. More than 10 million people suffered
temporary drinking water shortage and over 266,000 hectares of farmland became
fruitless. The direct economic loss of this drought in Sichuan was about nine
billion yuan (about 1.1 billion U.S. dollars).
Though an abnormal climate
was the main cause of the drought, losses could not have been that huge if there
had been a more complete water conservancy network, experts
said.
Chongqing also went through an eight billion yuan (about one
billion U.S. dollars) loss in this summer's drought.
Zhu Xiansheng,
director of the city's water resource bureau, said "the incomplete and old water
conservancy system made a huge area of farmland dry up this summer and also
caused drinking water shortage to both people and livestock, which all
aggravated Chongqing's losses." (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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