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School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT. Contemporary Chinese Environmental Debates and Policy: Water Resource Management Issues. Environment and Society (ENVI1110) Monday 20 th November 2006. Damian Howells damian@env.leeds.ac.uk Room 3.13, Chemistry West.
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School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Contemporary Chinese Environmental Debates and Policy: Water Resource Management Issues Environment and Society (ENVI1110) Monday 20th November 2006. Damian Howells damian@env.leeds.ac.uk Room 3.13, Chemistry West
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Water resources in China • Widespread shortage • Largely concentrated on the north China Plain • Urban demand for water increases 10% per annum • increases by 7% annually • 400 of 668 cities officially chronically short of water • Serious impediment to further development in many regions • Yellow River now frequently runs dry ( 42 days 1999)
Source: Donald, Stephanie H. & Robert Benewick (2005) The State of China Atlas Berkeley, Los Angeles & London: University of California Press p. 91
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT South/North Water Transfer Project • Aims to supply water to the cities of the North China Plain • An important economic region • Home to approx. 320 million people in 2002 • The region suffers from a chronic shortage of water • Climate is monsoonal • Rainfall is decreasing • Increasing demand • Bad management
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT • Total cost – US$60 billion • Approx. 300,000 people forced to relocate • Three Routes under construction • Eastern – due for completion in 2007 • Central – due for completion in 2030 • Western – due for completion in 2050
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT • The Three Gorges Dam • Specifications of the dam • 400 miles / 640km long • Capacity - 39.3bn m3 • Cost – US$24 (est.) • Impacts • 100 towns and villages flooded • 44,000 ha of farmland flooded • Forced relocation of 1.9m people • Pollution control? • Habitat destruction • Yangtze River dolphin, Chinese sturgeon
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Flood Control • Yangtze Valley prone to serious flooding • 1935 – 141,000 deaths • 1954 – 30,000 deaths • 1998 – approx. 3,600 deaths • 5.7m homes destroyed • 7m homes damaged • 14m people evacuated • Total economic losses est. £21bn • Major floods predicted to occur more frequently in the future • Deforestation, draining lakes//marshes
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT • Power for economic development • GDP grew at 9.4?% annually 1978-2001 • Predicted growth 7% annually until 2020 • Electricity generation grew by 8% 1980-95 • Estimated growth of 6% between 2000-10 • Concentrated in eastern provinces • Great Opening of the West Campaign • Requires a clean and reliable source of power
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT
School of Earth and Environment FACULTY OF ENVIRONMENT Suggested further reading For a general overview of China’s water resource issues see: World Commission on Dams (2000) Experience with Dams in Water and Energy Resource Development in the People’s Republic of China pp. 1-3 <Available from http://www.dams.org/kbase/studies/cn/> For further details on the Three Gorges Dam Project see: World Commission on Dams (2000) Experience with Dams in Water and Energy Resource Development in the People’s Republic of China pp. 89-93 <Available from http://www.dams.org/kbase/studies/cn/> For the South/North Water Transfer Project see: Liu Changming (1999) Environmental Issues and the South-North Water Transfer Scheme in Edmonds, Richard Louis ed. Managing the Chinese Environment Oxford: Oxford University Press pp. 175-86 For further details of pollution problems in the Huai River see: Economy, Elizabeth (2004) The River Runs Black Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press pp. 1-9