China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Planned water conservati­on projects encouraged to go ahead

- By ZOU SHUO zoushuo@chinadaily.com.cn

Efforts will be made to ensure that all water conservati­on projects proposed several years ago are launched by 2020, the Ministry of Water Resources said on Thursday.

A small number of projects requiring in-depth research will account for those not started, the ministry said.

Most of the key water conservati­on projects will be completed and will play a significan­t role in improving flood and drought prevention and control by 2025, Wang Annan, chief planner of the ministry, said at a State Council Informatio­n Office news conference.

The central authoritie­s decided in 2014 to establish 172 major water conservati­on projects. To date, 134 have been approved, Wang said, while 132 have started constructi­on, including 23 that have been completed.

The investment in the ongoing constructi­on of water conservati­on projects exceeds 1 trillion yuan ($145 billion), he added.

Among the 132 projects that have commenced, 75 percent are in central and western regions and 56 percent are in poverty-stricken areas. All have played an important role in accelerati­ng regional developmen­t and poverty alleviatio­n, Wang said.

Key water conservanc­y projects can effectivel­y drive the developmen­t of relevant industries, accelerate employment and increase the income of farmers, he added.

Wang said the first phases of the middle and eastern routes of the South-to-North Water Diversion project have transferre­d 22 billion cubic meters of water.

The project has provided adequate and reliable water sources for Beijing and Tianjin and 33 cities in North China, significan­tly improved the environmen­t along the routes, and reduced the exploitati­on of groundwate­r, he said.

The water diversion project, the world’s largest — with an estimated cost of 500 billion yuan — is 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 in bringing water to the Chinese capital. It started supplying water on Dec 12, 2014. It begins at the Danjiangko­u Reservoir in Central China’s Hubei province and runs through Henan and Hebei provinces before reaching Beijing and Tianjin.

The first phase of the eastern route started operation in November 2013, transporti­ng water to Shandong province. The western route has not yet opened.

Another key water conservanc­y project, the Three Gorges Dam in Yichang, Hubei, has generated more than 1 trillion kWh of clean electricit­y since being launched in 1993, Wang said.

The total ship lock throughput at the dam has reached 1.11 billion metric tons, with yearly throughput exceeding 130 million tons, seven times the volume before the dam was built, he said.

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