China plans to invest 155.4 billion yuan (US$19 billion) in the
next 20 years to enhance flood control on the Huaihe River, a
flood-prone river in east China.
More reservoirs will be built in the upper reaches of the river
to control flood, according to a newly finished flood control plan
for the river.
Water and soil preservation will also be carried out in those
areas, it said.
The plan also includes treatment of riverways and banks in the
middle reaches and enhancement of flood discharging capacity in the
lower reaches of the river.
The 1,000-kilometer Huaihe River originates in central China's
Henan Province and runs through Shandong, Anhui and Jiangsu provinces. The areas along the river
have a history of flooding and droughts.
In 2003, heavy floods along the Huaihe River claimed at least 16
lives and caused more than 400,000 residents to be evacuated, with
direct economic losses of 18.17 billion yuan (US$2.2 billion) in
Anhui, Jiangsu and Henan.
"The 2003 heavy floods exposed problems in the flood control
system of the river, such as the slowness in flood discharging and
low standards of works in treating flood and waterlogging," said
Qian Min, director of the Huaihe River Water Resources
Commission.
The new plan will enable the river to meet a biggest flood in
100 years from current less than 50 years, according to Qian.
By the end of 2005, nine of the 19 key flood control and water
treatment projects for the river, set by the State Council in 1991,
had been completed at a cost of 23.9 billion yuan (US$3 billion).
The rest are expected to complete next year.
(Xinhua News Agency August 2, 2006)