The water supply has returned to normal in three residential
areas of the densely populated Sichuan
Province in southwest China after a month-long battle to dilute
chemicals that leaked into the Tuojiang River.
The river is the sole water source in those areas.
More than 1 million people were left without potable water after
a combination of synthetic ammonia and nitrogen from the No. 2
Chemical Fertilizer Plant of the Sichuan General Chemical Group
leaked into the river, said the provincial environmental protection
bureau.
The density of ammonia and nitrogen in the affected section was
152 times higher than the national standard when the leakage was
reported late last month.
The Tuojiang River feeds into China's main shipping artery, the
Yangtze River.
The state-owned plant, a major taxpayer, was shut down on March
2, and local authorities shut down water supplies on the same
day.
The tap water had turned to a yellowish-black color, smelled
badly and caused skin irritation.
"Look at my skin, there are so many swellings on my arms and
legs. They are all caused by the polluted water," a local newspaper
quoted Li Xusheng, a nurse with the People's Hospital in Jianyang
City, as saying.
During the past few weeks, more than 1 million people in the
affected counties and cities--Jianyang, Zizhong and Neijiang--had
to wait in line for several hours to get clean water pumped from
wells. Local and provincial governments also mobilized hundreds of
water tankers to fetch drinking water from other regions day and
night.
The serious pollution killed about 500,000 kilograms of fish and
the direct economic loss is estimated to have topped 100 million
yuan (US$12 million), said the local environmental protection
bureau.
"I have never seen or even dreamed that such a large amount of
fish could jump out of the river and die," said Zhou Changchun, a
resident of Xingguang Village, near Jianyang.
Zhou said it is common to see dead fish floating on the surface
of the Tuojiang River every winter when pollution becomes serious
and in early spring when water levels in the river drop. "But the
pollution is the worst this time," said Zhou.
In a preliminary investigation, officials found that an
equipment breakdown at the chemical plant led to the spill,
according to a survey report from the bureau.
The plant upgraded its equipment late last year, but a trial
operation in January proved that the new equipment, treating the
chemical wastes with a high concentration of synthetic ammonia and
nitrogen, was not functioning properly.
However, it put into operation on February 11 without any
repair.
According to the report, that led to the chemical waste being
dumped directly into the Tuojiang River.
Liu Xiaofeng, vice governor of the province, said factory
employees and officials involved will receive heavy punishments
according to laws and regulations.
Discussions about compensation levels for the affected areas are
ongoing, said Liu during a provincial environmental protection
conference held on Sunday.
Provincial water resource authorities have opened six reservoirs
along the river since March 9 to allow fresh water to clean and
dilute the tainted water.
The density of ammonia and nitrogen has been lowered
considerably while the diluted chemicals have drifted more than 100
kilometers.
Now the three counties and cities at the pollution site can
again draw water from the river and the chemicals downstream do not
pose a serious threat to residents there, said the bureau.
In the wake of the pollution of the Tuojiang River, the province
has launched a thorough inspection along the river, and at the
Minjiang and Jialing rivers, also tributaries of the Yangtze.
Operations will be suspended in all the factories along the
rivers that do not meet environmental standards by April 15, said
the vice governor.
Sichuan Province introduced a new pilot project last year to
link performance ratings of local officials to their efforts to
protect the environment.
(China Daily April 1, 2004)