Safety of drinking water will be the top priority of the
government of China's northernmost
Heilongjiang Province in the next five years.
Harbin will attach greater importance to ensuring a safe
drinking water supply, building sewage treatment plants, and
containing industrial pollution, said Yan Weiliang, a spokesman
with the Provincial Environmental Protection Bureau at a recent
press conference.
A series of substantial measures will be employed, including the
protection of drinking water sources, treatment of serious
polluters and enhancement of water quality monitoring.
"All these are efforts to reduce pollution and improve the water
quality of the Songhua River," Yan said.
Meanwhile, a regular briefing system will also be established to
provide public with access to information about the government's
efforts on water pollution control.
Around 100 tons of pollutants containing hazardous benzene
spilled into the Songhua River after a chemical plant explosion on
Nov. 13 in northeast China's
Jilin Province.
The incident obliged the cities along the river, including
Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang Province and a city of more
than three million people, to temporarily suspend the water
supply.
Earlier this month, Zhou Shengxian, director of the State
Environmental Protection Administration, told a press conference
that the thawing of the frozen Songhua River will not cause a
second pollution as spring approaches.
"Although the situation is improving, the government will
continue its efforts to monitor, test and analyse the water quality
of the Songhua River in order to provide clean drinking water for
local residents," Yan said.
(Xinhua News Agency March 27, 2006)