Shenzhen, a coastal city in south China's Guangdong Province, will begin a pilot project
that will see seawater used to flush toilets in the hope of saving
its scarce fresh water supplies.
Newly built hotels and residential areas will be the first to
use seawater toilets. Seawater will also be used to cool power and
chemical plants, according to a municipal government plan on
recycling.
Water resources in Shenzhen are a mere quarter of the country's
average, said a Nanfang Daily report.
Due to decreasing rainfall in recent years in the Pearl River
area, the estuary of the river has fallen a victim to worsening
salt tides, which gravely affected supplies of drinking water in
Shenzhen as well as other cities in the Pearl River Delta
region.
Shenzhen will employ water-saving devises in all public
buildings by 2010, and discourage the production, sales and use of
commodes and devises that waste water, according to the plan.
China has an annual per capita water resources of 2,200 cubic
meters, only 31 percent of the world's average. Currently, about
400 out of China's 660 cities lack water and 136 have reported
severe water shortages.
The Ministry of Construction said that city authorities should
also act quickly to draft their water conservation plans for the 11th Five-Year Plan (2006-2010) period, which
gives priority to water conservation and waste water treatment.
(Xinhua News Agency May 4, 2006)