China Drought Leaves 670,000 Without Drinking Water
CHINA: April 14, 2008
BEIJING - A drought in China's northeast Liaoning province has left nearly
700,000 people without drinking water after rainfall in the first three
months of 2008 tumbled to one-fifth levels last year, the Xinhua agency said
on Sunday.
The area is a top grain producer, and maize and rice farming is due to begin
next week, but from January to the end of March it had got less than 2
centimetres (less than an inch) of rain.
Some 66 reservoirs have dried up, but the area has raised cash to build
1,700 new wells and expand and upgrade water conservation systems to try and
ensure spring planting can go ahead, Xinhua said, citing local sources.
China's weather administration said in early April that drought parching
other parts of northern China was the worst in several decades and would
continue this month.
Drought and floods are perennial problems in China, which has per capita
water resources that are well below the global average. Its meteorologists
have said global climate change is exacerbating extreme weather, including
droughts.
About 30 million Chinese in the countryside and more than 20 million in
urban areas face drinking water shortages every year despite huge government
investment to address the problem.
Across China, by March 26, 19.4 million hectares (48 million acres) of
arable land had been hit by the drought, including 3.3 million hectares
(8.15 million acres) of cropland.
(Reporting by Emma Graham-Harrison; Editing by Bill Tarrant)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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