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BEIJING, Jan. 25 -- Residents along the Songhua River
in Northeast China received a reassuring Spring Festival gift yesterday from the
country's environmental chief, who said they can safely consume its fish and
drink from groundwater wells.
"The water quality of the Songhua River will not
exceed national standards on a large scale during the spring thaw, and fish in
the river and from pounds along the banks are safe to eat," State Environmental
Protection Administration Minister Zhou Shengxian told a press conference in
Beijing.
Except for trace amounts of nitrobenzene well below
the national permissible standard for drinking water that were detected in
individual wells, the area's groundwater is safe for drinking, Zhou said.
There had been mounting concern among some people
that the spring thaw will release nitrobenzene trapped in the ice and in the
sediment of the river following the November blast at an upstream chemical plant
of the Jilin Petrochemical Corp, which spewed 100 tons of pollutants into the
water.
But Zhou said research had indicated only a small
amount of the toxic chemical had been frozen in the ice. Equally limited is the
amount of the compound entrapped in the sediment because the riverbed consists
largely of sand.
These factors, along with the fact that the river
will become a torrent when ice melts in the spring, convinced experts of the
safe water quality, Zhou said, citing an interim assessment of the river spill
done by a host of Chinese institutions and agencies, which started on December
13.
Chen Jining of Tsinghua University's Institute of
Environmental Science and Engineering, said: "Even in the rare cases when levels
are beyond standards in some places, we also have the technology in place for
example, activated carbon to ensure safe drinking water supplies."
The Jilin company is a firm under the China National
Petroleum Corp (CNPC). A special team has been set up to investigate any
connection between the blast and the CNPC, Zhou revealed.
Xie Zhenhua, Zhou's predecessor, resigned after the
accident.
"The team is working hard, and as soon as results are
available, they will be released to the public through the media," Zhou said.
Besides water quality, Zhou also guaranteed that
livestock along the river banks and their products are safe to eat, and using
the water of the Songhua River for irrigation will not inhibit the growth of
crops.
Zhou said China will further implement the joint
monitoring programme with Russia on boundary rivers. Experts predicted the front
of the pollution plume would reach the estuary of the Armur River in Russia by
the end of this month.
Fan Yuansheng, a division director of the
environmental agency, said yesterday that China has upgraded its pollution
control programme for the Songhua River, focusing on water sources of large and
medium-sized cities along the river.
Through building waste water and sewage treatment
facilities, promotion of clean production methods and other pollution control
efforts, the country will strive to make 90 per cent of the water in the Songhua
River drinkable within five years, Fan said.
Drawing lessons from the
Songhua incident, Zhou's agency has begun surveying China's 21,000 chemical enterprises,
more than half of which are located along the country's two major river basins,
the Yellow and Yangtze. Many of the plants had not undergone
environmental impact assessment and were built in residential areas or upstream from rivers,
according to the survey.
(Source: China Daily) |