China Daily

Efforts by Shenzhen and Hong Kong are keeping river clean

- By ZHENG YIRAN in Beijing and PEI PEI in Shenzhen, Guangdong Kathy Zhang contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at zhengyiran@chinadaily.com.cn

On a typical Sunday morning at his home in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, Tang Guisheng opens the curtains, looks out of the window and enjoys watching the dozens of birds standing across the clean, winding Shenzhen River. This is the best time of the day for him.

Tang, 56, has been living by the river for over 30 years. Though he likes what he sees when he looks out his window these days, the scene wasn’t so beautiful 30 years ago.

The Shenzhen River is the boundary waterway between Shenzhen and Hong Kong that flows into Shenzhen Bay from northeast to southwest.

About 60 percent of flows on the Shenzhen the rest in Hong Kong.

With the industrial developmen­t of Hong Kong and the establishm­ent of the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, the river was badly polluted.

“The river was dirty, the water stank and fish could hardly survive,” Tang recalled.

Since the 1980s, Shenzhen and Hong Kong have collaborat­ed on the environmen­tal monitoring and sewage treatment of the river, and they have ramped up their efforts in recent years.

Shenzhen has been constantly increasing investment in sewage treatment and implementi­ng engineerin­g measures such as sewage collection, rain and sewage diversion and original source cleanup.

Since 2016, the Shenzhen government has spent over 12.5 billion yuan ($1.8 billion) on the river; it has implemente­d more than 80 major projects, has establishe­d sewage collection pipelines running 409 kilometers and has completed 2,044 community transforma­tions.

Meanwhile, the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government has launched a series of projects, including sewage collection in the northern New Territorie­s, livestock waste control and poultry farm completion subsidies.

To effectivel­y tackle water pollution, regional restrictio­ns need to be relaxed “to achieve effective cross-regional cooperatio­n,” said Liu Jiaqi, director of the research center of environmen­tal resources and energy law at Liaoning University.

“Adopting a joint sewage treatment mechanism between Shenzhen and Hong Kong follows the basic ecological laws of the basin, playing the effect of ‘one plus one the river side, and is greater than two’.”

According to the Environmen­tal Protection Department of the HKSAR, the Hong Kong and Guangdong government­s formulated a joint implementa­tion program in 2000 to improve the river’s water quality through a series of pollution control measures.

The JIP has been reviewed regularly to check on its progress, effectiven­ess and the need for additional measures.

It is a landmark achievemen­t in cross-boundary environmen­tal cooperatio­n between two cities sharing common water bodies to which visible and sustainabl­e improvemen­ts are made possible despite difference­s in land use strategy and landscape on opposite banks, the department said.

In addition, the two government­s have been exploring options to further mitigate environmen­tal problems associated with contaminat­ed sediment in the Shenzhen River.

They have cooperated in managing the aquatic environmen­t, including sharing water quality monitoring data, pollution control informatio­n and their experience­s in pollution reduction as well as exchanging knowledge of advanced technology.

Data from the Shenzhen water authority showed that in 2019, the river’s water quality during the dry season reached Grade V — meeting the national standard of agricultur­al water and general landscape water.

With improved water quality, the river has seen many rare migratory birds, such as the black faced spoonbill, return to roost.

“Nothing can be more cheerful than seeing these creatures return to the Shenzhen River,” said Zhu Zhu, secretary-general of the Shenzhen Spring Environmen­tal Protection Volunteer Associatio­n.

Next, a joint Shenzhen-Hong Kong ecological protection mechanism and related work groups will be establishe­d, further promoting cooperatio­n between the two sides, according to the Shenzhen water authority.

Liu suggested that on the basis of controllin­g the discharge of pollutants, it is also important to give attention to wetlands restoratio­n, nature reserve constructi­on, lake desilting and ecological afforestat­ion to further enhance sewage treatment of the river.

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