Home>News Center>China
       
 

Northwest faces severe water shortage
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2005-08-09 21:03

The northwestern provinces and regions of China are expected to face a shortage of 6.5 billion cubic meters of water by 2010, an expert told the forum on population and development in northwest China.

The severe shortage of water resources has turned out to be themost outstanding contradiction between increasing population and insufficient resources in the northwestern parts of China, said MaLi, director of the China Population and Development Research Center.

According to Ma, China's major rivers such as the Yangtze River, Yellow River and Lancang River all originate from Qinghai province in the northwestern China, which benefit about 45 percentof China's total population.

However, due to climatic changes and deterioration of environment, the water sources in the fountainhead areas in the northwestern country have seen decreasing trend.

And some rivers in the regions have even run dry in their lowerreaches, affecting the life and production of over 100 million people in an area of about 250,000 sq km.

The northwestern regions of China, with one third of the county's areas, account for only 5.84 percent of the total water resources. Merely 39.2 percent of the rural population in the regions get access to supply of running water.

Moreover, the uneven distribution of rainfall and poor water storage capability has aggravated the water shortage for farming irrigation, industrial production and for the life of both humans and livestock, Ma added.

Guo Zhiyi, director of the population research institute of Lanzhou University, urged the northwestern regions of China to step up readjustment of industrial structure and transform production modes based on water-saving strategy.

The research report on the population development strategy in northwest China suggests development and extension of water-savingagriculture to enhance the utilization efficiency of the water resources in the regions.



Lenovo releases its first quarterly results
Giant panda released into the wild
Typhoon Matsa affects Dalian
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Shuttle Discovery lands safely in California

 

   
 

Trade surplus to decrease in second half

 

   
 

Terror worries push oil price towards $64

 

   
 

London bombing suspects formally charged

 

   
 

Economist sees no more yuan moves soon

 

   
 

102 miners trapped as flood waters rise

 

   
  Northwest faces severe water shortage
   
  102 miners trapped as flood waters rise
   
  Electricity supply to be balanced in 2007
   
  'Worst rains in a decade' o fall on Beijing
   
  City-rover panda sent back to wild
   
  Scientists call for national flowers
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Advertisement