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BEIJING, May 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Sewage allegedly discharged by local plants have killed huge amounts of aquatic life- an estimated 60,000 kilograms of fish - in the Wenjiang section of the Tuojiang River in Zizhong County in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, local environmental officials said.
According to the Zizhong Environmental Protection
Bureau, the sewage discharge occurred on Saturday night, leading to heavy losses
of fish and contaminated water. Starting Sunday morning, the river turned black
and fish began to die, local media quoted fisherman Li Bingyuan as saying.
Local fishery authorities have organized fishing
operators to retreat from the polluted areas and asked them not to sell and eat
the dead fish.
Within hours, however, the situation became better as
the water dissipated, and local people were told they need not worry about their
drinking water, officials said.
An investigative team, composed of provincial and
county environmental protection authorities, is looking into the accident.
A serious pollution incident in February and March at
the Tuojiang River, which feeds into China's main shipping artery, the Yangtze
River, caused nationwide attention.
More than 1 million people then were left without
potable water for nearly a month after a combination of synthetic ammonia and
nitrogen from the No 2 Chemical Fertilizer Plant with the Sichuan General
Chemical Group leaked into the river.
The density of ammonia and nitrogen in the affected
section of the river was 152 times higher than the national standard when the
serious leakage was reported in late March.
The State-owned plant was shut down on March 2. On
the same day, local authorities shut down local water supplies.
(China
Daily) |