BEIJING, Jan. 12 (Xinhua) -- The Yangtze River in
South China is expected to provide 1 billion cubic meters of water every year to
Beijing starting 2014, according to the municipal water authority.
"The water volume from the Yangtze River accounts for
about a quarter of Beijing's annual water demand in total," said Cheng Jing,
head of the water resources of the capital at a government meeting on Sunday.
"The River water supplied by the South-to-North Water
Diversion Project will help tackle the city's water shortage problem," Cheng
said.
Last year, Beijing was gripped by a drought and an
emergency diversion of 300 million cubic meters of water from neighboring Hebei
Province started in September.
"The water from Hebei will last till May," Cheng
said.
Beijing has had water shortages partly because of its
geography, with nine years of consecutive drought starting 1999. It has received
only 75 percent of its expected precipitation over that period.
The shortage in Beijing is set to reach a crisis
point in 2010,when the population is expected to top 17 million, or 3 million
more than its resources can support.
The South-to-North Water Diversion Project,
consisting of eastern, middle and western routes, is designed to divert water
from the water-rich south of the country, mainly the Yangtze River, the
country's longest, to the dry north.
The eastern and middle routes are already under
construction while the western route is still at blueprint stage.
The water price will also be increased in the first
half of this year because the current price fails to cover the cost of water
plants, Cheng said.
"A hearing will be held for the water price
adjustment and the plan will be implemented after the approval of the city
government," Cheng said.