The short-of-water Chinese capital should find alternatives in its
administration of water resources, according to Chinese and British
experts attending a seminar on urban water environment opening
Monday.
The experts recommended the new strategies include three aspects:
limiting the use of water; stopping pollution at its source; and
expanding the use of non-traditional water resources, said Qian Yi,
member of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
(NPC), China's top legislative body.
The city's rate of processing sewage is 46 percent, the highest in
the country but lagging behind developed countries with rates of up
to 80 percent, according to Qian, also an academician of the
Chinese Academy of Engineering.
Britain's experience in commercial operation and administration of
water resources will be instrumental in Beijing's efforts to make
better use of water resources, said British water experts Martin
Griffiths and Cedo Maksimovic.
Over the past 25 years, structural changes have been made in water
use and regulation in Britain, which has helped solve the same
urban water supply problems that challenge Beijing, they added.
(Xinhua News Agency September 11, 2002)
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