WUHAN, Sept. 26 (Xinhua) -- Chinese officials and
experts have admitted the Three Gorges Dam project has caused an array of
ecological ills, including more frequent landslides and pollution, and if
preventive measures are not taken, there could be an environmental
"catastrophe".
While the dam has served as a barrier against
seasonal flooding threatening the lower reaches of the Yangtze River and the
electricity generated by hydropower has led to a decrease of 100 million tons of
carbon emissions, the benefits have come at an ecological and environmental
cost, officials said.
All the participants in a two-day forum held in Wuhan
on Tuesday agreed that the project had exerted a "notably adverse" impact on the
environment of the Three Gorges reservoir, with a total circumference of 600 km,
and along the Yangtze since last year, when the project began operation.
They said the huge weight of the water behind the
Three Gorges Dam had started to erode the Yangtze's banks in many places, which,
together with frequent fluctuations in water levels, had triggered a series of
landslides.
"If no preventive measures are taken, the project
could lead to catastrophe," they said.
Tan Qiwei, vice mayor of Chongqing, a sprawling
metropolis next to the reservoir, said the shore of the reservoir had collapsed
in 91 places and a total of 36 km had caved in.
Frequent geological disasters have threatened the
lives of residents around the reservoir area, said Huang Xuebin, head of the
Headquarters for Prevention and Control of Geological Disasters in the Three
Gorges Reservoir.
At the forum he described landslides around the
reservoir that had produced waves as high as 50 meters, which crashed into the
adjacent shoreline, causing even more damage.
Clear water discharged from the Three Gorges Dam has
also threatened the safety of the protective embankments downstream, according
to Hubei Vice Governor Li Chunming.
Both Tan and Li said the quality of water in the
Yangtze tributaries had deteriorated and outbreaks of algae or aquatic weeds had
become more common.
"We can by no means relax our vigilance against
ecological and environmental security problems or profit from a fleeting
economic boom at the cost of sacrificing the environment," said Wang
Xiaofeng, director of the office of the Three Gorges Project Committee of the
State Council.
The open discussion of the negative effects of the
Three Gorges Dam comes a month after the Wall Street Journal reported on the
rising concerns of landslides, pollution and flooding in the area.
It quoted environmental scientist Weng Lida,
secretary general of the Yangtze River Forum, as saying, "We thought of all the
possible issues. But the problems are all more serious than we expected."
Commenting on the newspaper report, Wang said he
thought most of the statements were said out of a concern for the Three Gorges
Project, but some of the phrasing did reflect ulterior motives.
But he also admitted, "The problems mentioned in the
Wall Street Journal should merit adequate attention from all of us."
Wang said the Chinese government had also paid great
attention to consequences in the wake of the construction of the Three Gorges
Dam.
Wang revealed that during an executive meeting of the
State Council held earlier this year regarding the key problems arising from the
Three Gorges Project, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao was said to have cited
ecological and environmental woes as primary problems to be addressed.
While pledging to cooperate more with relevant
central and local government departments in promulgating regulations for
tightening management over the reservoir, Wang said comprehensive management
measures would be taken to ensure the water in the Three Gorges Reservoir is
clean.
"We have to make concerted efforts to attain the dual
goals of constructing a first-rate hydraulic project and making it into a
top-level showcase for the environment," said Wang, "we will work harder to turn
the Three Gorges Reservoir Area into an environmentally-friendly society."
The government has invested heavily in programs
designed to restore and conserve the ecology of the Three Gorges area in recent
years, including 12 billion yuan (about 1.5 billion U.S. dollars) spent on
trying to harness geological disasters such as landslides.
It has also closed or relocated 1,500 manufacturing
ventures, constructed more than 70 sewage disposal and waste treatment plants
and resettled about 70,000 people from disaster-prone areas.
The participants in the forum in Wuhan also called
for the establishment of a long-term mechanism on the prevention and control of
geological disasters in the Three Gorges Reservoir Area, and a ban on fish
farming in cages in the reservoir area to prevent an excess of nutrients
degrading the water quality.
The Three Gorges Project, the world's largest water
control facility, was launched in 1993, with a budget of 180 billion yuan (about
22.5 billion U.S. dollars). Located on the middle reaches of the Yangtze River,
the project boasts a 185-meter-high dam, completed in early 2006, and a
five-tier ship lock. It has necessitated the resettlement of at least 1.2
million people.
Seventeen turbines - 14 on the northern bank of the
Gorges and three more on the southern bank - are now in operation. They produced
23.77 billion kwh of electricity in the first half of the year, 2.65 billion kwh
more than the same period last year.