Water shortages continue as storage rises By Liu Weifeng and Li Jing (China Daily) Updated: 2005-02-22 01:41
The Miyun Reservoir, the most important source of drinking water for the
nation's capital, is witnessing rising water levels for the first time in the
past five years. But the increase is a mere drop in the water-guzzling ocean
that the nation's capital has become.
Miyun and Guanting, two major reservoirs in Beijing, have recorded rises of
120 million and 20 million cubic metres respectively year-on-year, according to
a recent document released by the Beijing Water Authority.
Children frolic around a burst water hydrant in Nanchang on
December 14, 2004. [newsphoto]
And an unexpected "abundance of rain" last year went some long way to easing
the problem, the authority's 2004 working report was cited as saying.
Increased reservoir levels are in part the result of the successful
allocation and transfer of water from other minor reservoirs and neighbouring
provinces.
A total of 130 million cubic metres (units) of water has been collected from
six smaller reservoirs and transferred to Miyun, the main one.
A further 90 million units from Shanxi and Hebei provinces have also been
pumped into it.
Beijing has 16 reservoirs in total, but the majority of them have dried up or
been polluted over the years, leaving Miyun as the major source of drinking
water supplies.
Last year, some 300,000 hectares of agricultural land requiring low water
levels was cultivated in rural outskirts, and water consumption by the
industrial sector achieved a "zero rise."
Precipitation, meanwhile, in 2004 was 539 millimetres, up 19 per cent on that
of 2003.
"However, the rising reservoir levels are far from enough to fill the water
shortage," said Yu Yaping, an official with the Beijing Water Authority.
A source close to the authority said Beijing consumed some 3.4 billion cubic
metres of water last year 1.2 billion units for public and residential use, 1.2
billion for agriculture, 800 million for the industrial sector and 200 million
on other uses.
"One noticeable point is that of the total 3.4 billion units consumed, 2.6
billion came from ground water," said the source.
This means surface water, which includes reservoirs and rivers, supplied no
more than 800 million units.
Designed with a holding capacity of 4.3 billion units decades ago it was
expected Miyun would be able to meet the drinking water demands of Beijing,
Tianjin and Hebei Province.
But since 1982, "it has been dedicated to supplying Beijing alone," said Yu.
Liu Peng, an engineer with the authority's water conservancy office, told
China Daily that a new round of water economy measures are to be taken this
year.
To that end, the authority drafted a new conservancy guideline, which was
turned into a municipal legislature after it won approval from the municipal
People's Congress in January.
"It's expected to take effect during the first half of this year," said Liu.
At the same time, some newly-built public buildings and residential
communities are required to have water recycling facilities.
The city consumed 140 million cubic metres of recycled water last year,
representing a utilization rate of 28 per cent.
This year, the percentage of recycled water forming the city's total
consumption is set at 30 per cent.
"It is set to achieve 50 per cent by 2008," said Liu.
Mayor Wang Qishan, announced in his working report submitted to the Third
Session of the 12th Beijing Municipal People's Congress, the government is to
lay 70 kilometres more of pipeline for recycled water this year.
Water prices are also set to rise by about 1 yuan (12 US cents) per cubic
metre, said Liu.
Protecting water sources
The Beijing Municipal Committee of the China Democratic National Construction
Association has also appealed to the municipal government urging more efforts to
protect water sources, mainly located in the city's northern suburbs, especially
in Huairou and Miyun districts.
The committee submitted a nine-page proposal to the Third Session of the 10th
Beijing Municipal Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference, suggesting that district governments with water sources be required
to protect supplies and cut pollution, as opposed to focusing on economic
growth.
"When evaluating the achievements of local officials in the districts, we
should see whether they've done a good job in ensuring quality water to Beijing
residents, rather than merely statistical growth in GDP," said the proposal.