Monday, July 26, 2010

Pollution makes quarter of China water unusable-ministry (Calgary Herald)

 
Toxic chemicals left this Chinese lake coloured orange-brown. About 460,000 people a year die prematurely in China due to exposure to air and water pollution. File photo.
 

Toxic chemicals left this Chinese lake coloured orange-brown. About 460,000 people a year die prematurely in China due to exposure to air and water pollution. File photo.

Photograph by: Reuters, Reuters

BEIJING - Almost a quarter of China's surface water remains so polluted that it is unfit even for industrial use, while less than half of total supplies are drinkable, data from the environment watchdog showed on Monday.
Inspectors from China's Ministry of Environmental Protection tested water samples from the country's major rivers and lakes in the first half of the year and declared just 49.3 per cent to be safe for drinking, up from 48 per cent last year, the ministry said in a notice posted on its website (www.mep.gov.cn).
China classifies its water supplies using six grades, with the first three grades considered safe for drinking and bathing.
Another 26.4 per cent was said to be categories IV and V — fit only for use in industry and agriculture — leaving a total of 24.3 per cent in category VI and unfit for any purpose.
Despite tougher regulations over the last decade, the ministry has struggled to rein in the thousands of small paper mills, cement factories and chemical plants discharging industrial waste directly into the country's waterways, and the overuse of fertilisers has also left large sections of China's lakes and rivers choking with algae.
The ministry said there were noticeable improvements in air quality throughout the country's cities in the first half of 2010, with sulphur dioxide emissions declining 30.2 per cent compared to last year.
Airborne particulate matter in China's cities fell 12.1 per cent and nitrogen dioxide declined 5 per cent, the ministry said.
However, 189 out of 443 cities monitored suffered from acid rain in the first half of the year.



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