A national organization will be established this year to better
protect the world's longest and oldest canal, the Beijing-Hangzhou
Grand Canal, making it a top candidate for a world heritage site, a
senior official said.
Shan Jixiang, director of the State Administration of Cultural
Heritage, said at a press conference during the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference that the organization will coordinate protection
efforts from different governmental departments and provinces along
the canal.
Shan admitted that the 2,400-year-old canal, approved by the
State Council as a national key cultural relic in 2005, is facing a
series of problems because of inadequate protection efforts.
He said it lacks legislative support, good planning, a
coordinating mechanism, and funds.
Shan criticized some places for damaging the canal's ancient
look and original style by constructing numerous city squares and
grasslands along the waterway.
"The canal is more than a tourist attraction," he explained. "We
should combine the protection work with economic development to
benefit people's lives."
Shan disagreed with the idea of making the whole canal navigable
again.
The canal is now navigable between Hangzhou in Zhejiang Province
and Jining in Shandong Province. Because of inadequate water and a
narrow course, most of the canal's northern section (from Beijing
to Jining) is inaccessible to boats.
Zhou Liang, an official with the Ministry of Communications,
said the canal remains important to the economy in addition to its
cultural value.
More than 100,000 vessels use the canal and carry 260 million
tons of goods every year, three times as much as the
Beijing-Shanghai Railway, Zhou said.
"The canal connects major coal bases in the north and serves as
a cheap and convenient channel to transport coal to the fast
developing Yangtze River Delta," Zhou said.
To improve its transportation capacity, Shandong, Jiangsu, and
Zhejiang provinces will invest 20 billion yuan ($2.56 billion) on
dredging the waterway by 2010.
On completion of the project, the canal will have at least a
level-3 navigational ability, allowing 1,000-ton vessels to sail
from the Dongping Lake in Shandong Province to Hangzhou, and
increasing its transportation capacity by 40 percent.
At present, the section south of the Yangtze River has only a
level-4 navigational ability.
The 1,794-kilometer-long Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal links five
major rivers: the Haihe, Yellow, Huaihe, Yangtze, and Qiantang.
With parts of the canal dug in the 5th century BC, the canal has
served as a major south-north transport artery since it was
completed in the 13th century during the Yuan Dynasty
(1271-1368).
(China Daily March 15, 2007)