One Million Face Drought in Southwest China
CHINA: December 18, 2007
BEIJING - More than a million people in the southwestern Chinese region of
Guangxi have been hit by drinking water shortages in the worst drought since
1951, the official People's Daily said on Monday.
In the last three months, Guangxi, the country's main sugar-growing region,
had had less than half the normal amount of rain, the report said, while
other parts of the region had seen almost no rain at all.
The government has earmarked 2.29 billion yuan (US$310.8 million) to bring
water to thirsty villages, the newspaper added.
Large areas of south China are also suffering from serious drought, with
water levels on two major rivers -- the Gan and the Xiang -- in rice-growing
provinces dropping to historic lows.
China suffers water shortages of nearly 40 billion cubic metres a year which
its water minister has blamed largely on global warming, state media have
reported, though severe pollution and rising consumption by both farmers and
booming cities have compounded shortages. (US$1=7.369 Yuan) (Reporting by
Ben Blanchard)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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