Fish, groundwater in Songhua River safe (Kyodo) Updated: 2006-01-24 15:35
China said Tuesday follow-up tests following a chemical spill in a river in
the northeast part of the country in November have shown that fish from the
river are safe to eat and water supplies are drinkable.
Polluted water in Songhua River reaches
Harbin, the capital of northeastern Heilongjiang province November 24,
2005. [Reuters] |
Interim findings of the impact assessment of pollution in the Songhua River
revealed that nitrobenzene concentration in fish meet the permissible standard,
Zhou Shengxian, the State Environmental Protection Administration minister, said
at a press conference.
Monitoring at wells also showed no nitrobenzene in many of them, and while
trace amounts were found in some wells, it was within the permissible standard,
according to Zhou.
The research also found that only a small amount of nitrobenzene has been
frozen in ice and the amount of the substance in the riverbed is also limited,
leading experts to believe that spring thawing will not contaminate the water to
an impermissible level, Zhou added.
A factory explosion in Jilin in November sent carcinogenic benzene and
nitrobenzene down the river toward Russia, disrupting the water supplies of
cities along the way.
Zhou's predecessor had quit over the chemical spill, and China has provided
assistance to Russia in detecting and mitigating the pollution there.
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