DANJIANGKOU,
China, Dec 27, (AFP) - A towering dam in central China holds back a vast
expanse of water destined to travel over 1,000 kilometres north to Beijing, but
critics say it will only temporarily quench the city's thirst.
China's capital on Saturday received its
first flows from the South-North Water Diversion Project, one of the most
ambitious engineering projects in Chinese history.
After decades of planning and at least
$33 billion of investment, over a billion cubic metres of water is projected to
flow to the capital every year, through more than 1,200 kilometres of channels
and pipes -- the distance from London to Madrid.
"Beijing is now formally receiving
water" from the project, the city's government said in a text
message.Another 8.5 billion cubic metres -- equivalent to 3.4 million Olympic-sized
swimming pools -- will reach provinces along the way, planners say.
China's government says the project,
which will ultimately have three routes and an estimated $81 billion total
cost, will solve a chronic shortage in China's northern cities.
Water availability per person in Beijing
is on a par with Middle Eastern countries such as Israel, threatening economic
growth, the key source of support for China's ruling Communist party.
"This water needs to go to the
North," said a tour guide surnamed Chen, standing atop the 110-metre-high
dam at the Danjiangkou reservoir in the central province of Hubei, which sits
120 meters above Beijing's sea-level to allow flow by pure gravity.
Among the engineering feats involved are
a 7.2 kilometre-long tunnel beneath the Yellow river -- China's second biggest
waterway -- described in official reports as "the most enormous river
crossing project in human history".
To carry the flow over one river in
Henan province, Chinese engineers built a 12 kilometre aqueduct -- the longest
in the world.
But critics say that the scheme's
success is jeopardised by declining rainfall in the south, and it will only act
as a temporary stopgap in the north's insatiable demand.
- Mao Zedong -
Northern
China supports nearly half the country's population and economy alongside
two-thirds of its arable land, but has just a fifth its total water supply,
according to the World Bank.
Looking over the Yellow river in 1952,
Communist China's founding father, Mao Zedong is reported to have said:
"The north of China needs water and the south has plenty. It would be fine
to borrow some if possible."
At a time when a single word from Mao
could launch a project, studies were swiftly begun but technical concerns and
lack of capital meant the idea was shelved until a revival by then-president
Jiang Zemin, whose government approved it in 2002.
Its construction has since taken on
added urgency with water levels per person in Beijing falling to just 120 cubic
metres -- less than Algeria and roughly on par with Yemen, both desert
countries.The project's eastern route, built along the 1,400-year-old Grand
Canal, began transporting water from the Yangtze to Shandong province last year
but has been dogged by pollution concerns, and some fear the same fate could
befall the pricier central section.
State broadcaster CCTV reported last year
that the Danjiangkou reservoir had become a "cesspool" due to rampant
discharge of sewage into its tributaries, with human waste and animal corpses a
common sight in one of them.
Officials have reportedly closed
thousands of factories upstream from Danjiangkou, and this year announced that
the water was good enough to drink.
- 'Very short-sighted' -
But
years of declining rainfall in southern China means it now regularly sees
droughts of its own, and analysts say the project will exacerbate those strains.
"The basic trend in the South is
that rainfall decreases each year," said Wu Xinmu, of the Water Research
Institute at China's Wuhan University.
Flow on lower sections of the rivers
which feed the Danjiangkou reservoir will decline dramatically and the project
will "threaten the local supply of drinking water and influence farming
irrigation and industrial production" in parts of central China,
researchers at the University wrote in a report.
The central route has forced the
relocation of more than 330,000 people, according to state-run media.But the
1.05 billion cubic metres it is intended to deliver to Beijing every year will
be not be enough to end the city's thirst.
As China's cities become richer, water
consumption by citizens has rocketed, and is set to grow further.The capital's
annual water use has reached 3.6 billion cubic metres, and with supplies at
only about 2.1 billion cubic metres it already faces a 1.5 billion cubic metre
shortfall every year.
Environmentalists say water conservation
is an urgent priority, and prices -- currently well below global averages at
around 4 yuan per cubic metre -- need to rise.
A "supply-side approach"
exemplified by the project "does not address the underlying causes of the
region's water stress", said Britt Crow-Miller, assistant professor of
geography at Portland State University, who has studied it.
"China's
current development model is very short-sighted," she added. "It's
about keeping things growing at all costs... and deferring the consequences as
far into the future as possible."
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