China Daily

Govt bonds the key as post-flood repair work completed

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Most of the water resources management facilities in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region that were damaged by floods in July have been restored — and some even enhanced — thanks to bonds issued by the central government late last year.

The Huaihe River Commission said the central government approved 413 restoratio­n projects in the region, which is located in the Huaihe River Basin. It said 354 had been completed as of Wednesday.

The total investment for the projects stands at over 12 billion yuan ($1.7 billion), most of which has come from the bonds the central government issued last year.

In October, the central government decided to issue 1 trillion yuan of additional bonds to support the rebuilding of disasterhi­t areas and strengthen the country’s disaster-relief capabiliti­es.

The bond issuance was announced after devastatin­g floods swelled North China’s Haihe River Basin and the Songhua River Basin in Northeast China during last year’s flood season.

The Beijing Water Authority said it will accomplish the restoratio­n of all its flood-ravaged water resources management facilities before June, which usually marks the beginning of the major flood season in the capital.

The capabiliti­es of the damaged facilities will be restored to pre-flood levels, with some even enhanced, the authority said.

One of the facilities that has been restored is the Daning Reservoir, on the border of Beijing’s Fengtai and Fangshan districts.

Amid the massive floods in July, the reservoir was one of three put into use as flood detention basins. That left many of its facilities seriously damaged, including an impermeabl­e wall and a rubber dam.

The project to restore the damaged facilities was launched on Oct 2 with a total investment of over 44.7 million yuan, with 70 percent contribute­d by the additional central government bonds.

Despite the disruption caused by extreme cold during winter and the high level of groundwate­r in the area, the project was essentiall­y completed on April 7.

Concrete pouring requires relatively high temperatur­es, because if it is conducted in low temperatur­es, the concrete may crack, said Zhao Minglei, deputy head of the reservoir’s administra­tive office.

“To cope with the extreme cold last winter, workers had to build a makeshift shed over the area under constructi­on and also use heating equipment to increase the temperatur­e,” he said.

Shi Jianwei, head of the constructi­on team, said the level of groundwate­r in the area was quite high because of the water in the reservoir, and that also made it difficult to forge ahead with constructi­on work.

“It was very much like we were working in a big pool,” he said.

The team had to use up to 50 pumps — each capable of pumping 100 cubic meters of water an hour — to reduce the level of groundwate­r to an acceptable state, Shi said.

Yang Zhigang, the head of the Huaihe River Commission’s flood and drought control department, said the commission has asked constructi­on contractor­s of restoratio­n projects that cannot be completed before the rainy season in the BeijingTia­njin-Hebei region to hammer out emergency plans to cope with potential floods this year.

“Once floods happen, they will roll out measures in a timely manner to prevent floods from affecting constructi­on work,” he said.

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