Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, July 24 (Xinhua) -- Beijing kicked off a waste collection and
recycling project Wednesday in all Olympic venues, about two weeks before the
opening of the summer Games.
Based on the expected volume of spectators, the 31 venues in the city are
expected to jointly produce some 14,000 tonnes of trash, including leftovers,
paper, plastic bottles and medical waste, during the sports events, according to
the Beijing Municipal Administration Commission.
Beijing has pledged to make 50 percent of this waste useful after
recycling, a common standard fulfilled by most host countries of the Games.
Food waste must be moved away from stadiums within four hours and other
rubbish will be cleared up and transported to four sorting centers and
processing plants in Beijing's suburbs after matches, according to the
commission.
In addition, water recycling measures have been adopted on some Olympic
sites since March, which will help the city to save 30 million cubic meters of
clean water a year, said Wang Hongchen, chief engineer with Beijing Sewage
Company in charge of the project.
After filtering, reverse osmosis, active carbon absorption, ozone
oxygenation and other advanced treatments by a sewage plant and two water
recycling plants, recycled water will become safe enough for reuse, according to
Wang.
Since 2001, six sewage factories have been operating to provide2.54 million
cubic meters of water a day for industry, farming, sightseeing lakes, and
forestation needs.
Beijing officials had said that there was no need to worry about water
supply during the Games as the city was able to combine all water resources,
including reservoirs, underground water and rainfall, to meet the demand despite
nine years of drought.
Water saving has been a primary task. The city used 4 billion cubic meters
of water in 2000 and 3.4 billion cubic meters last year, a saving of almost 100
million cubic meters a year.
In 2007, it used 480 million cubic meters of recycled water, or14 percent
of the total water supply, to supplement watercourses, car washing and crop
irrigation.