Faced With Water Scarcity, China Looks To Sea Ice Desalination
By Sara Jerome
China appears to be looking at ice as a solution to its water woes.
The nation "will soon begin production of large amounts of fresh water
through the desalination of sea ice, according to a university research
team and a Chinese company," Xinua news agency reported.
Is commercialization of this technology on the horizon? One company is
betting on it.
"A research team from Beijing Normal University signed a sea ice
desalination technology transfer agreement with Beijing Huahaideyuan
Technology," the report said.
The firm has big ambitions for this technology.
"[It] is expected to be able to produce at least 1 billion cubic meters
of fresh water annually by 2023, said Yu Jian, executive president of
the company," according to the report.
China's has been eyeing this avenue since the '90s but the technique had
not yet been commercialized.
"China's sea ice desalination program started in 1996 when Shi Peijun, a
professor from Beijing Normal University, realized that low saline ice
could ease the water shortage around the Pan-Bohai Bay area in north
China, after desalination," the report said.
The technology design is already underway.
"The research team has the basic principles and technology for sea ice
desalination mastered, including an ice breaking platform and an
ice-gatherer. Sea ice is much less saline than seawater, and the
desalinated water can be used in agriculture, industry and for
drinking,"
according to Water 21, the magazine of the International Water
Association.
China is facing a major water squeeze.
Reuters reported
last week that "China's wetlands have shrunk nearly 9 percent since
2003, aggravating water scarcity in a country where food production,
energy output and industrial activity are already under pressure from
water shortages."
Experts say the country must invest heavily in water in the coming
years.
"Water has emerged as a major issue in China.
Its scarcity endangers economic growth and social stability, and China
has set aside $660 billion for projects to boost supply this decade,"
the report said.
For more on this topic, check out
Water
Online's Desalination Solution Center.
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