Two barrels of toxic chemicals missing in a river in northwest
China's Gansu Province, after an upriver traffic
accident on Sunday, have affected the water supply of 60,000
people, official sources said on Thursday.
A truck carrying ten barrels of TDI overturned in the county of
Jiuzhaigou on the southern border with Sichuan Province early on
Sunday morning, dumping all the containers into the adjacent
Tangzhu River, which joins the trunk stream of Baishui River and
flows northward into Wenxian County of Gansu, the environmental
protection bureau of Wenxian said.
The Sichuan government informed Gansu of the accident in time
and Wenxian immediately suspended the water supply from the
river.
Eight barrels have been retrieved as of Thursday afternoon after
joint operations by the two neighboring provinces, Wenxian
government said.
Searches are underway to recover the two missing barrels.
TDI, a toluene-like chemical usually used as an ingredient of
industrial paint, is harmful to people's respiration system, eyes
and skin.
There has been no report of casualties due to the accident.
The county, which has a population of 243,000, had partially
resumed its water supply by Thursday noon as monitoring results on
five sections of the Baishui River did not show any sign of
pollution, but the lower reaches of the river are under strict
observation.
About 60,000 residents living along the river section in the
county have turned to mountain springs for the past four days, but
the water supply to the rest of the population was not
affected.
The State Environmental Protection Administration has sent a
team of officials to the county to deal with the accident.
(Xinhua News Agency May 19, 2006)