Construction of the Henan Province section of the central route of
China's South-to-North Water Diversion Project will kick off by the
end of this month.
Construction began on the central route of the
1,277-kilometer-long project in 2003. It aims to divert water from
Danjiangkou Reservoir in central China's Hubei Province to northern China, including
Beijing and Tianjin Municipality.
Sources with the Henan provincial government said the
73-kilometer Henan section of the canal, the longest part, is
expected to cost 67 billion yuan (US$8.4 billion).
Forty-three cities and townships in the province will benefit
from the province's annual water quota of 3.77 billion cubic meters
drawn from the 9.5 billion cubic meters diverted through the canal
every year, when the first phase of the project is completed in
2008.
The project requires the relocation of 212,000 local people and
the government has approved 23,667 ha. of land for
resettlement.
In order to protect the canal water from pollution, the
provincial government started three years ago to carry out
comprehensive water conservation and sewage control measures with
investment to date of 2.6 billion yuan (US$325 million), and
another 1.5 billion yuan (US$187 million) is expected to be in
place shortly.
Under the government's reinforced supervision, over 400
pollution producers have been either shut down or rectified for
pollution treatment. No new pollution producers and water-consuming
businesses have been approved along the canal route in the province
in the last three years.
The Chinese government approved the South-to-North Water
Diversion Project in 2002, aiming to relieve severe water shortages
in parched northern areas.
The project will divert water from the Yangtze River, China's
longest river, to the north through the eastern, middle and western
routes. The eastern and middle routes, with total investment of 200
billion yuan (US$25 billion), are under construction.
The water source of the central route of the project, the
Danjiangkou Reservoir, has a reserve of 15.5 billion cubic meters,
according to the latest monitoring by the Yangtze River Water
Resources Bureau.
(Xinhua News Agency September 14, 2006)