South China's Guangdong Province has put a quota on water
consumption in the hope of stopping people and businesses from
wasting water.
According to the new requirement from the provincial water
conservancy department, households in the provincial capital of
Guangzhou will have to pay extra if they use more than 210 liters
of water a day.
The requirement sets different quotas for industrial,
agricultural, service sectors and for cities throughout the
province taking climatic, water resources and other factors into
account,
The department did not indicate how much more people will have
to pay if they exceed their quota.
The quotas will be in place for a two-year trial period starting
Thursday.
Guangdong has experienced increasingly intense water shortages
in recent years. The province's per capita water resource is only a
quarter of the world average.
Meanwhile, Guangzhou's per capita water consumption is 2.3 times
higher than the world's average, which is partly due to wasteful
practices.
China plans to cut its water consumption for per unit GDP by
20percent by the end of 2010, seeking an annual decrease of four
percent, according to the Ministry of Water Resources.
(Xinhua News Agency March 1, 2007)
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