- South-North Water Transfer Project
The South-North Water Transfer Project (zh-cp|c=南水北调工程|p=Nánshuǐ Běidiào Gōngchéng) is a multi decade project being actioned by the
People's Republic of China to better utilize water resources available to China. This is to be achieved through a South North Water Diversion Project (SNWD). Whilst the main thrust was to divert water from theYangtze River to theYellow River andHai River , other spinoff plans are also loosely included. Amongst these, a controversial plan calling for the capture and diversion of water fromBrahmaputra River , located inYarlung Zangbo Grand Canyon north ofIndia , has been under study for years. This is because the heavily industrialized Northern China has a much lower rainfall and its rivers are running dry. Already the Yellow River has often gone dry in its lower reaches in recent decades and some of the Hai River tributaries almost dried out throughout the year. Supply and demand conditions have often changed more rapidly than the project plans ability to accommodate the changes, resulting in much higher costs and reduced benefits. On the other hand, positive results have been seen inBeijing , host city of the2008 Olympics .Project's Conception
The idea for the South-North Water Transfer Project originated from
Mao Zedong who said, "Southern water is plentiful, northern water scarce. If at all possible, borrowing some water would be good." After his comments, the Chinese Water Works Department conducted several studies on the project. After decades of study, the South-North Water Transfer Project settled on three different proposals for routes: The western route is in the western headwaters of the rivers where Yangtze River and Yellow River are closest to one another; the central route is from the upper reaches of the Han River (a tributary of Yangtze River) toBeijing andTianjin ; and the eastern route using the course of the Grand Canal.Eastern Route
The Grand Canal is currently being upgraded. Water from the Yangtze River will be drawn into the canal in
Jiangdu City , where a giant 400 m³/s. pumping station was built already in the 1980s, and is then fed uphill by pumping stations along the Grand Canal and through a tunnel under the Yellow River, from where it can flow downhill to reservoirs near Tianjin. Construction on the Eastern Route officially began on December 27, 2002, and water is supposed to reach Tianjin by 2012. However, water pollution has affected the viability of this project.Central Route
The central route is from
Danjiangkou Reservoir on Han river toBeijing . This route is built on theNorth China Plain and water can flow all the way toBeijing by gravity. The main engineering challenge is to build a tunnel under theYellow River to move the water to the north of Yellow River. The water from Danjiangkou Reservoir is expected to reachBeijing by2008 and the whole project is expected to complete around 2010. The major difficulty is the resettlement of ~250,000 persons around Danjiangkou Reservoir and along the route. The other problem is the influence on the Han River, where ~1/3 water are diverted. One long-term solution is to build another canal to divert water from theThree Gorges Dam to Danjiangkou Reservoir.Western Route
The western route is to divert water from the headwater of
Yangtze (and also the headwaters ofMekong orSalween downstream) into the headwater ofYellow River . In order to move the water through the drainage divide between these rivers, huge dams and long tunnels are needed to be built. The feasiblility of this route is still under study and this project won't start in the near future. Also, since many nations (Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam) rely on these rivers downstream, plans have met with stiff resistance from these nations.Project Controversy
Since the introduction of the project, it has created widespread controversy. Opponents to the project believe it is a waste of resources, it could create a large number of migrant people but transfers too little water, it won't provide an economic benefit, the dry season could cause the
Yangtze River to suffer from water shortages, it would influence the Yangtze River's transportation, and it could cause a biological disaster. Defenders of the project believe theYangtze River has a plentiful supply of water with large amounts of water flowing into the ocean annually. They argue that transferring one portion to the poorly irrigated areas of the North could solve the North's water scarcity issue.ee also
*
Water resources of China
*Meng Xuenong , the project's deputy director 2003-07
*Northern river reversal project in the Soviet UnionExternal links
* [http://www.nsbd.mwr.gov.cn/ Official Website (in Chinese)]
* [http://edition.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/east/11/15/china.water/index.html Thirsty China to divert the mighty Yangtze]
* [http://www.water-technology.net/projects/south_north/ Water industry article]
* [http://members.aol.com/anglochine/nsbd.htm China's South-North Water Transfer Project]
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/28/world/asia/28water.html Beneath Booming Cities, China’s Future Is Drying Up]
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