China has to spend 10 million yuan (US$1.3 million) annually to
prevent upstream garbage floats from piling up at the mammoth Three
Gorges Dam, so as to ensure safe operation of the world's largest
water control project.
According to officials with the China Yangtze River Three Gorges
Project Development Corporation, the garbage floats from the
upstream of the Three Gorges reservoir amount to 100,000-200,000
cubic meters annually at the Dam, most of which accumulate in
flooding seasons.
"Reservoirs worldwide are being more or less beset by floats.
The Three Gorges reservoir is no exception, as it intercepts floats
from upstream while it holds water," said Hu Xing'e, who is in
charge of reservoir business in the China Yangtze River Three
Gorges Project Development Corporation.
The corporation has spent more than 20 million yuan (US$2.5
million) on building a garbage-clearing vessel, so far the largest
of its kind in China, the officials said.
Garbage floats collected will be sorted out and then be buried
or fired, the officials added.
The corporation has entrusted governments of central China's Hubei Province and southwestern Chongqing Municipality, which are situated
near the Three Gorges dam site, to help clear up garbage floats in
the mainstream and tributaries of the Yangtze River.
Besides, the corporation has entrusted the Yangtze River
Hydrological Bureau Three Gorges Branch to scrutinize ingredients,
quantity, sources, distribution and way of moving of the garbage
floats. Effective measures will be worked out on the basis of data
gathered by the hydrological bureau to protect the environment of
the dam site.
The hydrological bureau's Three Gorges branch has launched 10
fixed monitoring stations in the dam area, which are engaged in
conducting regular monitoring every day. It also cruises the dam
area for garbage examination once a month.
Launched in 1993, the 180-billion-yuan (US$22.5 billion) Three
Gorges project, including a 185-meter-high dam and 26 generators on
both banks of the Yangtze River, is being built in three phases on
the middle reach of China's longest river.
It is scheduled for completion in 2009 and by then, it will be
able to generate 84.7 billion kwh of electricity a year. The
project will also function to harness flooding and benefit
shipping.
(Xinhua News Agency May 20, 2006)