Special report: 2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, August 2 (Xinhua) -- East China's coastal city
Qingdao, which will host Olympic sailing games, promised on Saturday that it
would keep green algae out of the event waters.
Ocean monitoring showed sporadic green algae still in
the sea around Qingdao, and wind and ocean currents could bring it to the
sailing venue again, said Wang Haitao, assistant chairperson of the Beijing
Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG) sailing
committee.
"We have installed barriers and fences to keep algae
out of the Olympic sailing venue, which covers 50 square kilometers, and have
prepared equipment for fishing out the algae," Wang said on Saturday.
Most of the 1 million tons of green algae that was
cleared from the sea around the sailing venue was transported to remote suburbs
of Qingdao and buried deep under the ground.
"It will not cause any secondary problems," he said.
In mid-June, the coast was coated with a vast algae
bloom that had floated from the Yellow Sea. It covered 32 percent of the sailing
venue at the peak of the outbreak.
After a month of intense effort, the local
authorities installed two barriers to keep algae out of the sailing venue.
Soldiers and volunteers had been working to remove the algae.
Wang said the odor from rotting algae along the
city's coast had disappeared because all the algae was removed by Aug. 1.
He said Chinese companies used fresh algae to produce
nutritious food products for export.
"If a strong typhoon or storm occurred in Qingdao, we
would have to suspend the games," said Wang. "However, there will be plans to
deal with extreme weather and to resume the games as soon as possible
afterwards."
The sailing will take place from Aug. 9 to 23. More
than 400 athletes from almost 60 countries and regions will compete for 11 gold
medals.