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NANCHANG, Nov. 23 (Xinhuanet) -- China has 70 percent
of its rivers contaminated and 75 percent over-enriched, according to
information from a symposium in east China's Jiangxi Province Wednesday.
Currently, most of China's rivers are menaced with shrinkage, disfunction, contamination and other problems like
a decrease of swamps, said Chen Bangzhu, director with the population, resources
and environment committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference (CPPCC) at the First National Inland Lakes Symposium Wednesday.
The worsening conditions of these endangered rivers
are caused by a booming economy, the expansion of population and irrational
development, Chen acknowledged.
Apart from that, other causes also contribute, such
as lack of supporting laws, inadequacy of concerned surveillance departments.
Without scientific guidance, some rivers are polluted with illegal discharge of
waste and overuse of fertilizers.
A ready consequence looming ahead is a shortage of
fresh water and frequent floods and droughts.
Inland lakes are important resources. The Tai Lake
area in Jiangsu Province, for instance, known as an area teeming with fish and
rice, nurtures 3 percent of China's population with its 0.4 percent of the
country's territory. Enditem |