Cities along China’s Yellow River told to suspend use of its water following diesel spill
By Christopher Bodeen, APMonday, January 4, 2010
China diesel spill prompts water use alert
BEIJING — Hundreds of thousands of Chinese were told Monday to stop using water from the Yellow River after an upstream pipeline leaked 100 tons of diesel fuel into a tributary.
The leak is the latest environmental disaster to strike China’s waterways, considered the world’s most heavily polluted.
The diesel spilled from a broken pipeline on Wednesday into the Wei River which feeds into the Yellow River, a water source for millions of Chinese.
Three counties and an industrial zone in western Shanxi province have been ordered to halt their use of river water, according to a notice issued by the local government. The areas have a combined population of about 850,000 people.
The warning contradicted earlier reports that the contaminated water had been contained after workers dug diversion channels and used floating dams and solidifying agents to try to stop the diesel spill.
“Relevant departments remind those living along the river that for the sake of safety, both people and livestock should suspend use of Yellow River water for drinking,” said the notice from the region’s Yuncheng city government publicity office.
Yucheng is an industrial center 720 miles (1,160 kilometers) southwest of China’s capital, Beijing.
The notice did not say how much of the slick had made it into the river, saying only that tests showed the leak “could create an impact on the water quality of the Yellow River.”
China’s second-longest river has already seen its water quality deteriorate rapidly in recent years as discharge from factories has increased and water levels have dropped because of diversion for booming cities.
The pipeline’s owner, China National Petroleum Corp., said last week it had plugged the leak in the pipeline and had removed a “large amount” of contaminated water, mud and sand.
There was no immediate word on disruption of supplies from the pipeline, a key fuel conduit which links the capitals of northwest Gansu province and central Henan province. CNPC is China’s largest producer of oil and gas.
China’s Environmental Ministry has tried to shut down polluting factories along China’s main waterways, but its power is limited because local environmental protection bureaus are under the control of local governments.
In 2005 carcinogenic chemicals, including benzene, spilled into the Songhua River, forcing the northeastern city of Harbin to sever water supplies to 3.8 million people for five days. The accident also strained relations with Russia, into which the poisoned waters flowed.
Tags: Accidents, Asia, Beijing, China, East Asia, Environmental Concerns, Greater China, Municipal Governments, Rivers And Streams, Water Environment