| Arid conditions threaten Mogao GrottoesBy Ma Lie (China Daily)
 Updated: 2006-02-27 05:23
 
 
 XI'AN: The Mogao Grottoes, a site on the World Heritage list, is being 
threatened by increasing arid conditions, say experts. 
 The intensified desertification caused by water shortages in the area has 
harmed the preservation of the cultural relics in recent years. 
 The grottoes are located on a cliff about 25 kilometres southeast of 
Dunhuang, a city in a desert in the southwest of Gansu Province in Northwest 
China.
 More than half of the murals and painted sculptures in 492 caves are 
suffering from colour changes or crisping and peeling, as well as other damage 
linked to an increasing number of sandstorms, said Wang Wanfu, deputy director 
of the Relics Preservation Research Institute under the Dunhuang Academy. 
 The water shortage in Dunhuang has mainly been caused by the increasing 
demand for supplies by residents and tourists, the relics protection expert told 
China Daily. 
 Formed since AD 366, the grottoes are made up of a 1,680-metre-long complex 
with 735 caves from different dynasties. Of the total, 492 in the south were for 
worshipping purposes and the remaining 243 in the north were used by monks to 
live in, Wang said. 
 Since 1987, when the grottoes were put on the World Heritage list by the 
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, they have 
attracted more and more tourists from both home and abroad.
 Local farmers have been pumping underground water for agricultural irrigation 
since the 1970s, and at present there are more than 1,500 such irrigation wells 
across Dunhuang, sources from the local water conservancy department said. 
 It has caused the level of underground water to drop by about 50 centimetres 
annually over the past 25 years, according to Ma Yucheng, deputy director of 
Dunhuang Municipal Water Authority.
 The drop has also caused grassland degeneration and wetland withering, the 
official said. 
 The serious situation has drawn attention from local officials. Dunhuang 
municipal government has banned the drilling of new irrigation wells, and plans 
to develop a more efficient agriculture system to save water, according to Zhang 
Ping, Dunhuang's deputy mayor.
 The local government has suggested creating a water diversion project for 
several years, which has been put aside because of fund shortages and arduous 
construction, Zhang said. 
 
 (China Daily 02/27/2006 page3)  
 
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