Top Chinese environmental protection officials have listed water
pollution control in the Songhua River's drainage area as one of
the key water pollution control and prevention projects in the
country. It is soliciting suggestions for a five-year plan
concerning the control of the river's pollution from 2006 to
2010.
This is the first time the Songhua River's pollution has been
raised as a key project, in the same category as the pollution
control of China's "three rivers and three lakes," which includes
the Huaihe River, the Haihe River, the Liaohe River, the Dianchi
Lake, the Chaohu Lake and the Taihu Lake. These water systems are
some of China's most heavily polluted.
Over the weekend, Zhou Shengxian, director of the State
Environment Protection Administration (SEPA), vowed that the
goal of the project is "to let all people drink clean water,"
Xinhua News Agency reports.
A draft of a control plan for the Songhua River's drainage area
is currently being worked on by experts and will be announced to
the public once it receives approval from the State Council,
according to Li Jieshi, an official from the Heilongjiang
Environment Protection Bureau.
The draft says that protection priority will be given to the
water sources of large and medium sized cities along the Songhua
River, along with the ultimate ecological goal of a healthy
standard of clean water in each river section.
A primary goal in the draft is to ensure that more than 90 per
cent of the population living within the drainage area of the
Songhua River will have clean drinking water by 2010.
The draft also put forward the demand to improve urban sewage
systems in each city with a population over 200,000, in the next
five years.
It hopes that by 2010 at least 60 per cent of urban waste water
and 95 per cent of industrial waste water will be processed in
order to reach a certain environmental standard before
discharge.
The Songhua River in Northeast China is the largest tributary of
the Heilong River (also known as the Amur River in Russia), flowing
1,927 kilometres from the Changbai Mountains through the Jilin and
Heilongjiang provinces. The river drains 551,000 square kilometres
of land with a population of more than 60 million.
Four cities with populations of over 1 million are located in
the drainage area Harbin, Changchun, Jilin and Qiqihar.
A blast at a chemical plant in November last year in Jilin City,
Jilin Province, spilled some 100 tons of toxic chemicals (mainly
benzene and nitrobenzene) into the Songhua River, forming a toxic
slick, which at its peak extended 80 kilometres.
The toxic slick plagued millions of residents living along the
downstream sections of the river. Harbin, capital of Northeast
China's Heilongjiang Province with an urban population of nearly 4
million, was forced to cut off it's water supply for four days,
resulting in huge economic losses.
"I think it is this pollution catastrophe that has prompted the
country to make up its mind to thoroughly deal with pollution in
the Songhua River," said Li Xinglong, a chief engineer from the
Heilongjiang Environment Protection Science Research Institute, who
took part in the draft's suggestion-soliciting meeting in Harbin
last Sunday.
The draft stated that a preliminary budget used for the
pollution control of the Songhua River will come to 26.6 billion
yuan (US$ 3.28 billion), the Beijing Youth Daily reported
last Sunday.
Officials from the SEPA did not confirm the sum and said it
needs a "further check."
(China Daily January 10, 2006)