Improving the quality of drinking water sources in Guangdong has been named as the most important
environmental mission of the provincial government in the coming
years.
Guangdong Environment Protection Bureau published a report
yesterday on the environmental situation of the province in South
China last year and in the period of the 10th Five-Year Plan
(2000-2005).
According to the report, Guangdong has 66 drinking water
sources, covering all of its 21 cities.
The quality of all drinking water sources, except those in the
cities of Guangzhou and Shenzhen, met the national standard last
year.
"The situation is very positive we will do a lot more in the
future, hoping all drinking water sources meet the national
standard as soon as possible," Chen Guangrong, deputy director of
the bureau, said yesterday in a press conference on the report.
As Hong Kong and Macao share the same water sources with the
province, Chen promised Guangdong's environment authority would
further cooperate with the special administrative regions to tackle
environmental issues.
Chen said the bureau has proposed the provincial government
enact a law to protect the drinking water sources.
Compared with the related indices in 2004, the air quality
across the province improved last year, meeting the second-level of
national standard.
Air quality in China's urban areas is classified into five
levels, from level one for excellent and level five for
hazardous.
The average density of nitrogen dioxide was 0.028 milligrams in
1 cubic meter of air last year in the province, dropping by 7.9
percent on the previous year.
Chen said although the general trend was positive, there were
some concerns over sulphur dioxide levels, which are on the
increase.
"To generate energy for the rapid growth of the regional
economy, power plants are producing more emissions of sulphur
dioxide," Chen said.
The bureau also revealed that more than 70 percent of the river
water flowing across urban areas was rated as polluted or heavily
polluted.
According to the bureau's report in the fourth annual plenary
session of the 10th Guangdong Provincial People's Congress in
February, it will desulphurize all large sized thermal power plants
by 2008, and require all newly-built power plants possess
desulphurization facilities to improve the environmental
situation.
The bureau has set targets of disposing at least 60 percent of
household sewage, 80 percent of household rubbish and 70 percent of
discarded electronic products and electrical appliances in urban
areas.
(China Daily April 18, 2006)