China plans to wash away silt building up in the lower reaches of
the Yellow River - Chinese people's "mother river" - by discharging
water from a major reservoir on the river's middle reaches.
The largest project yet to clear silt deposits from the bed in the
lower reaches of China's second longest river is due to begin on
July 4 and will last for 10 days, Monday's Beijing Morning Post
reported.
It
quoted Yellow River Water Conservancy Committee sources as saying
that the Xiaolangdi Hydro-electric Project on the mainstream of the
Yellow River would adjust its runoff and speed of currents making
them sufficiently strong to wash away silt deposits from an 800-km
section between the Xiaolangdi project and the estuary.
By
finding a way to control silt deposits in the lower reaches of the
river, China aimed to make the river safer and guarantee lives and
property of people living in the river valley, the papersaid.
Solving flooding caused by silt deposited on the river bed has long
been a headache for China. Due to rising silt levels, the river bed
in the lower reaches is growing higher and higher, increasing the
risk of flooding.
The 5,464-km-long river runs through nine Chinese provinces and two
autonomous regions, emptying into the Bohai Sea, in Shandong
Province in east China.
(People’s Daily July 2, 2002)
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