Although areas along the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze
River are being threatened by flood disaster, East China's Shandong
Province is experiencing its worst drought in 100 years.
Ironically, about 300 hectares of land and more than 1 million
people in Shandong's central, northern and southwestern parts are
facing a severe water shortage. Experts say exceptionally low
seasonal rainfall is the cause of the drought.
Rainfall in the province from June 1 to August 29 had only totalled
194 millimetres, about half of the normal amount, according to
statistics from the local water resources bureau.
Latest statistics show that water reserves in all projects in the
province are only holding about 3.9 billion cubic metres of water,
about 4.1 billion cubic metres less compared with the same time in
previous years.
Meanwhile, the flood peak of the Yangtze River has arrived in
Central China's Jiangxi Province.
The water level of Jiangxi's Poyang Lake, which is one of the
biggest lakes along the Yangtze, was yesterday more than 1.27
metres above the warning level.
Jiangxi's government has issued an alert calling people to make
more efforts to prevent the flood from destroying their lives and
wealth.
As
the flood peak moves down the river, the water level of the Yangtze
is expected to surpass warning levels in provinces in the lower
reaches, such as Anhui and Jiangsu, in the following days.
Although the flood peak is moving to the sea, efforts to fight the
flood are still quite concentrated in areas such as Hunan, Hubei
and Jiangxi provinces, as thundershowers and heavy rain will
continue in coming days.
While lakes and rivers in southern China are bursting, the upper
part of the Nansi Lake, one of the major reservoirs of Shandong
Province, has dried up. Only an estimated 3 million cubic metres of
water are left.
In
Jining, the drought is endangering more than 320,000 people in 350
villages.
The 130-kilometre Jining section of the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand
Canal has been cut off since July 9.
The rural areas of Jining, Liaocheng, Dezhou, Heze, Jinan and
Binzhou are the hardest hit, accounting for approximately 60 per
cent of the total area affected by the drought.
It
is estimated that the economic losses in the area this summer would
reach 7 billion yuan (US$846.4 million).
Officials from the provincial anti-drought office say consolidated
supervision on water resources will be regulated in the future.
In
areas with good water resources, more efforts will be put in farm
management, assuring high production.
For other places, according to water reserves, efforts will be
emphasized on urban living, major industrial and mining
enterprises, economic crops and autumn planting.
Precautions to measure against severe and long-term drought will be
adopted.
Liaocheng, one of the most drought-afflicted cities, has put a
total of 220 million yuan (US$ 26.6 million) into fighting the
drought. There are more than 70,000 newly set-up machine-operated
wells that have greatly helped irrigate local farmlands.
(
August 30, 2002)