The water quality in China's Three Gorges reservoir on the
Yangtze River is being polluted by discharge from industry and
towns upstream of the giant dam, a Chinese environmental scientist
said on Thursday.
While the water quality in the mainstream of the Yangtze River
is relatively good, the river's main tributaries such as the
Jialing River, Tuojiang River and Wujiang River upstream from the
Three Gorges reservoir are seriously polluted, Wei Fusheng, vice
director of Chinese Society for Environmental Sciences, said at the
annual meeting of the society.
About 75 percent of the pollutants in the reservoir are from the
three main tributaries, said Wei, who is also a member of the
Chinese Academy of Engineering.
More than 60 percent of the organic pollution in the reservoir
comes from industry, agriculture and urban settlements along the
banks of the Yangtze River and the Jialing River, Wei said.
Another report on Yangtze River protection and development
released by the Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology under
the Chinese Academy of Sciences last month showed that more than
600 kilometers of the Yangtze River are in critical condition.
Almost 30 percent of its major tributaries are seriously
polluted.
The report also assessed the Three Gorges Dam project, showing
its huge reservoir is seriously polluted by pesticides, fertilizers
and sewage from passenger boats.
The Three Gorges Project, the world's largest hydropower
project, includes a 185-meter-high dam and 26 generators. It is
located on the middle reaches of the Yangtze,
There are 160 million people living in the Three Gorges area in
five provinces and municipalities.
(Xinhua News Agency May 25, 2007)