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BEIJING, March 30 (Xinhua) -- A major environmental
clean-up effort is being waged in the provinces and regions along the Yellow
River.
One of these provinces, Gansu, an inland northwestern province on the upper reaches of the river, will invest 4.97 billion yuan
(612.8 million U. S. dollars) during the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10) to
control pollution and improve river conditions, according to the province's
environment protection authority.
The Gansu section of the Yellow River stretches 913
kilometers over four cities and prefectures. The cities of Lanzhou, capital of
the province, and Baiyin, both have a high density of heavy industries
discharging large quantities of pollutants into the river, said Yang Zhiming,
vice-governor of Gansu Province, as quoted by Thursday's China Daily.
Added to this is some 237 million tons of sewage from
the province, which is pumped into the river each year, with only 34 percent of
it receiving proper treatment.
The 4.97 billion yuan will be used for 199
environmental projects in Gansu to assist heavy industries in decreasing
industrial pollutants, construction of urban sewage treatment plants and the
installation of supervision facilities to protect the environment and ensure
better water quality by 2010, Yang said.
Following the Yangtze River, the Yellow River is the
second longest in China, spanning 5,464 kilometers across nine provinces and
regions from Qinghai Province in Northwest China into the eastern Bohai Sea in
Shandong Province.
It covers 752,000 square kilometers, an area
populated by more than 146 million people, or 11.5 per cent of China's total
population, according to official statistics.
Rapid economic development and a growing urban
population over the past 30 years has taken its toll on the river. Without
adequate resources, pollution has worsened and measures to protect and improve
the river have not been taken effectively, said Luo Yongfu, environment expert
and professor at Chang' an University in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province.
Luo called for a collaborative effort by all
provinces and regions along the river to control pollution.
"Otherwise, the improved section along the lower
reaches of the river may again be contaminated by pollutants from the upper
reaches," Luo said.
Gansu's neighboring province, Shaanxi, located in the
middle reaches of the river, also plans to curb pollution in its Weihe River,
the largest tributary of the Yellow River.
The Weihe River is the only channel for industrial
waste and sewage in central Shaanxi, according to He Fali, director of Shaanxi
Provincial Environmental Protection Department.
"Every year, the Weihe River receives 800 million
tons of industrial and urban sewage, one of the major pollution sources of the
Yellow River," He said.
The Shaanxi government will pour 4.5 billion yuan
(US$554.8 million) over five years into cleaning up the Weihe River. It plans to
construct sewage treatment facilities, adjust industrial waste infrastructure,
develop ecological agriculture and high-tech industries, and further protect
surface and underground water resources.
Similar measures and plans are in train for other
provinces and regions -- the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, Shanxi and Henan
provinces in the river's middle reaches, and Shandong Province in its lower
reaches. Enditem
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