Work has been completed on two crucial tunnels of the
Shijiazhuang-Beijing section of the South-to-North Water Diversion
Project.
"We tunnelled around the clock for eight months before we
reached the other side of the hill," a project manager in charge of
the tunnelling said yesterday.
"From now on, our work will shift from groundwork to concrete
pouring."
Experts are confident that the success of the 1,800-meter-long
tunnels will give added impetus to the Shijiazhuang-Beijing Section
of the project, which was launched in 2003.
The 307-kilometre long section is designed to link four
reservoirs in north China's Hebei Province with Beijing to help
ease possible shortages in China's capital city.
Upon its completion next year, the 17 billion yuan (US$2
billion) Beijing-Shijiazhuang section is expected to carry 400
million cubic meters of water per year.
The south-to-north water diversion project consists of three
south-to-north canals, each running more than 1,000 kilometers
across the eastern, middle and western parts of the country.
By 2010, urban and industrial water consumers in Beijing and
Tianjin two cities plagued by worsening water shortages are
expected to use water taken from the Yangtze River by the
channels.
"This will optimize the country's existing water resources from
within its major rivers and rearrange China's unevenly distributed
water supply," said Zhang Jiyao, top official of the project's
construction committee.
(China Daily June 19, 2006)