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#1 MaryAM

MaryAM

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Posted 03 April 2013 - 07:37 PM

I'm copying this information from an e-mail I received - thought it was important enough to post. So many people moving to Florida - gee they don't have enough water to support the population. Good thing to research. “The disappearance of rivers poses both an environmental and social threat to China.” China apparently has more problems than I knew. I know the big cities are very polluted, I wonder if this also has to do with some of the damming projects they have done. A lot of the problems between Israel and the Palestinians is over water. The new gold. The result of too many people. We don't let our animals breed at but let people. Go figure. When the natural resources that support life are depleted - especially water - what is left? Millions Facing Water Shortages; A Chinese couple stroll past a beached boat on the banks of the Yellow River, at a fifty year low, on June 17, 2003 near Baotou, Inner Mongolia, China. (Natalie Behring-Chisholm/Getty Images) The results of the first national water census conducted by the Chinese Ministry of Water Resources were released last Thursday. The study shows that since the 1990's at least 1,000 rivers have been disappearing from China's landscape every year. Half of the rivers gone were over 60 square miles in volume. Chief engineer of Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Minerals says the water is disappearing because of unsustainable growth. [Fan Xiao, Chief Engineer, Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Minerals] “Current developments in China are an unsustainable model. This is at the cost of excessive consumption of natural resources. It destroys nature and causes great damage to the people. The government is responsible for it.” Chinese state-run Global Times agreed, citing experts who said it was "a direct manifestation of headlong, ill-conceived development." It also said that, “large hydroelectric projects such as the Three Gorges Dam… were likely to have played a role.” The Chinese Ministry of Water Resources revealed that there are now 22,909 rivers with over 62 square miles of water. Twenty years ago there were more than 50,000 rivers that size. So where have 28 thousand rivers gone? [Fan Xiao, Chief Engineer, Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Minerals] “The expansion of cities, construction of businesses and industrial parks took the place of landfills over rivers. Also, the majority of water conservation development is derived from intercepting rivers and diverting water. The construction either cuts the river flow off, or simply kills the river.” The United Nations has listed China as one of the 13 countries most affected by water scarcity. Official Chinese data shows that waste has led to 40% of China's rivers being seriously polluted. Over 24% of China's water is of such low quality that it is completely unusable. New Chinese Premier Li Keqiang pledged more transparent pollution policies. Authorities know that the issue of environmental pollution has become a source of civil unrest. [Fan Xiao, Chief Engineer, Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Minerals] “For at least ten years, pollution has been a social issue. Many protests are because of pollution. It is happening everyday and getting more and more serious.” The Global Times commentary indicated that pollution has replaced land confiscation as the issue that angers the majority of Chinese. It stated, “The disappearance of rivers poses both an environmental and social threat to China.” And an economic threat.