Zhuhai City in south China's Guangdong Province is ready to
conserve freshwater released from the Xijiang River beginning
January 18, Guangdong media reported Thursday.
Hydropower stations along the Xijiang River in South China's
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region began to release greater volumes
of water Tuesday to help dilute the effect of saltwater tides in
the Pearl River Delta area.
Guangdong water resources officials and experts held a meeting
in Zhuhai on Wednesday to discuss how the city could conserve water
when the freshwater arrives in the city January 18. The officials
and experts estimated that the city would have about eight to 10
days to conserve the freshwater.
Officials from Zhuhai's water resources department said they
would conserve about 7 to 10 million cubic meters of freshwater
during the days when the freshwater passes the city. They said
their work would focus on the city's southern reservoirs, which are
the sources of Macao's water supply. They said the southern
reservoirs would secure about 4 million cubic meters of
freshwater.
Under a plan by the State Flood Control and Drought Relief
Headquarters, 450 million cubic meters of water will be diverted to
the Pearl River Delta, benefiting cities like Guangzhou, Zhuhai,
Zhongshan and Macao.
Macao, which relies on the water supply from Zhuhai, is
currently enduring its worst ever salinity crisis. The salinity
level stood at 600 milligrams per liter in recent days in Macao,
much higher than the 200-milligram-per-liter standard set by the
World Health Organization. The local health authorities have
advised residents to use bottled water.
Macao Water Co Ltd has raised a fund of 1 million patacas
(US$125,000) for the poor families that cannot afford bottled
drinking water amid the present salinity crisis. The company said
Macao residents could have freshwater from January 20.
(Shenzhen Daily January 13, 2006)