Shanghai Daily

Massive water diversion project paying off

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For 67-year-old farmer Zhang Qinhu, the highlight of the past five years is that he and his fellow villagers have bid farewell to muddy well water.

“It was hard to descale kettles, so we had to frequently buy new devices in the past. Thanks to a canal, we can get cleaner, safer drinking water now,” said Zhang from a village in the city of Jiaozuo, central China’s Henan Province.

The canal he mentions runs for 1,432km, roughly the distance from New York to Orlando, Florida. It is the main part of the middle route of the south-tonorth water diversion project, the world’s largest.

The project was designed to take water from China’s longest river, the Yangtze, through eastern, middle and western routes to feed dry areas in the north.

The middle route is the most attention-grabbing of the three due to its role of bringing water to the Chinese capital, and it started supplying water on December 12, 2014. The first phase of the eastern route started operation in November 2013.

Over the past five years, the middle and eastern routes of the project have benefited more than 120 million people, according to the Ministry of Water Resources.

In a lab in northweste­rn Beijing, Wang Xaioyu is busy monitoring and analyzing data related to the quality of water from the south. Besides monitoring devices, the center where Wang works also uses luminous bacteria and fish as indicators of water quality.

“Water from the south is very important for Beijing residents. We must be very cautious, keeping watch on each abnormal data fluctuatio­n,” Wang said.

The water from the Danjiangko­u Reservoir in central China’s

Hubei Province gushes north by canal and pipeline and runs across Henan and Hebei provinces before reaching the water treatment plants of Beijing and Tianjin. More than 70 percent of tap water in Beijing’s main urban areas is from Danjiangko­u, benefiting over 12 million residents, nearly half of the city’s total population.

Beijing’s annual water consumptio­n had been about 3.6 billion cubic meters. But with local supplies at only about 2.1 billion cubic meters, the capital faced a shortfall of 1.5 billion cubic meters every year, which had been met largely through groundwate­r extraction.

The diverted water has replenishe­d the city’s water resources and ensured the security of water supply, said Wang Junwen, deputy director with Beijing water resources control center.

The project has seen the city’s per capita water resources increase from 100 cubic meters to 150 cubic meters. Meanwhile, by the end of October, the average depth of the undergroun­d water in Beijing’s plain areas stood at 22.78 meters, 2.88 meters higher than that before the diverted water flowed to Beijing.

To optimize the allocation of water resources and quench the thirsty north, the idea of diverting water from the resource-abundant south to the north was first envisioned by China’s late leader Mao Zedong in the early 1950s.

“Over the past five years, the middle route of the water diversion project has yielded remarkable social and ecological benefits,” said Yin Yanfei, an official with the Constructi­on and Administra­tion Bureau of South-to-North Diversion Middle Route Project.

In Tianjin, the water supply of residents in 14 districts is all from the diversion project; the Yangtze River also feeds 37 cities and counties in Henan and over 90 cities, counties and districts in Hebei.

To allow water from Hanjiang River, a major tributary of the Yangtze, to flow to the country’s northern regions, the dams of the reservoir were raised to their highest level, which meant a total of around 8,333 hectares of land in Hubei would be submerged including the house of villager Tan Chengping.

As one of 182,000 residents in the city of Shiyan who had to leave their homes, Tan was a staunch opponent of the project then. “No one in my village wanted to leave,” he recalled. “We feared nobody would care for us after we were relocated to the new places.”

Six months after he was told to move in 2011, Tan’s family moved to a new 100sqm house built by the local government at a higher area about 2km away from his old house.

Tan attended a free orange planting training course organized by the government after he was given 4 mu (2,667 square meters) of new farmland, less than his previous land but more profitable.

“This year, I can harvest 10,000 kilograms of oranges, which is expected to bring me more than 20,000 yuan (US$2,841),” Tan said.

A total of 22,000 people out of all the relocated people in Shiyan lived below the poverty line before the middle route of the water diversion project started operation in 2014. Up to now, all of them have been lifted out of poverty, according to the city’s relocation service center.

Over the past five years, the water quality of Danjiangko­u has been kept at the level of Grade II or higher, which means the water is suitable for drinking after filtration.

(Xinhua)

 ??  ?? The Danjiangko­u Reservoir in central China’s Hubei Province. — Xinhua
The Danjiangko­u Reservoir in central China’s Hubei Province. — Xinhua

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