China Daily

Water supplies expand into remote areas

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

With 90 percent of its rural population already having access to tap water, China will strive to ensure such safe drinking water reaches one-fifth of the remaining rural residents this year, even though most of them live in sparsely-populated areas where water is scarce, the Ministry of Water Resources said.

China saw rural water coverage reach 90 percent at the end of last year, meaning that the country beat its target of increasing the proportion to 88 percent two years earlier than planned, said Xu Dezhi, deputy director-general of the ministry’s department of rural water and hydropower.

He said the achievemen­t follows the ministry’s endeavors to integrate urban and rural water supplies while promoting both large and small rural water supply systems in light of local conditions.

The ministry has prioritize­d extending existing urban water networks to rural residents and building centralize­d water facilities that supply over 1,000 metric tons of water or serve 10,000 people every day, he said.

Under the ministry’s guidance, local water resources authoritie­s have sought more support from government budgets, issued special bonds and turned to bank loans and private capital to raise funds, he said.

A record high investment of 147 billion yuan ($20.4 billion) was made across the country last year, of which bank loans and private capital contribute­d almost 50 percent, he said.

Xu vowed tailored measures to expand rural tap water coverage.

The last 10 percent of rural residents without access to tap water are mainly from mountainou­s, pasturing and alpine areas, he said.

“With low precipitat­ion, such places suffer severe water scarcity,” he said.

The harsh natural conditions in these places, which usually feature huge mountains and deep ravines, make diverting water challengin­g, he said. The sparse population­s mean the cost of building tap water facilities is quite high.

He said the ministry will hammer out a technical guideline as it promotes standardiz­ed constructi­on and renovation of small water projects, which will be equipped with facilities for water purificati­on and disinfecti­on.

“We will ensure that not a single household and person in these areas will be left out,” he stressed.

The ministry will make intensifie­d efforts to enhance the management of such projects, he added. While bringing rural water supply facilities under unified management systems in each county, monitoring work will be strengthen­ed to ensure water quality.

Xu identified the constructi­on of county-level emergency water systems as another priority of the ministry to beef up safe rural water supply.

Counties will be required to set up emergency teams, stockpile emergency supplies and establish emergency water intake points, he said.

“We will make consistent efforts to improve the mechanisms to identify and handle problems that emerge in rural water supply,” Xu said. “A mechanism for follow-up checks will also be upgraded to ensure that all the problems can be addressed in a dynamic manner.”

 ?? SU QIAOJIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Villagers use newly connected tap water to do their laundry on Luxi island in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, on Nov 16.
SU QIAOJIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Villagers use newly connected tap water to do their laundry on Luxi island in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province, on Nov 16.

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