Special Report: Reconstruction After Earthquake
CHENGDU,
Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- About half of the 2,125 reservoirs damaged in last May's
massive earthquake in southwest China's Sichuan Province can be repaired this
year, a water resources official said here Thursday.
Leng Gang, director of the Sichuan water resources
department, said the provincial government would spend more than 37.7 billion
yuan (5.5 billion U.S. dollars) this year to fix 1,000 damaged reservoirs and
378 km of embankment.
The projects "will solve drinking water problems for
5 million people," he said.
Leng said reservoir reconstruction was scheduled for
completion by the end of next year.
He also said the agricultural province lacked
sufficient drinking and irrigation water even before the 8.0-magnitude quake.
For example, only 55 percent of its arable land was effectively irrigated.
Sichuan planned to increase reservoir storage
capacity by 4.5 billion cubic meters by 2012, from the current 10.5 billion
cubic meters.
"With this expansion, the irrigated area in Sichuan
will be increased by 666,6667 hectares, from the current 2.5 million hectares,"
he said.
Sichuan had endured a winter drought, with average
precipitation 50 percent less than a normal year, according to provincial
meteorologists. Southern Sichuan also had a rare heat wave Monday, with a high
temperature of 36.7 degree Celsius.
Leng warned that the drought would mean losses of
spring crops.