Home > Heat, drought take rising toll on southwest China

Heat, drought take rising toll on southwest China

by Open-Publishing - Friday 1 September 2006

International Environment

Heat, drought take rising toll on southwest China
01 Sep 2006 05:15:58 GMT

BEIJING, Sept 1 (Reuters) - The worst drought to hit southwest China in more than a century is spreading to neighbouring provinces with temperatures reaching record highs, state media said on Friday.

The densely populated municipality of Chongqing and eastern parts of Sichuan province have been plagued by repeated heatwaves and have seen no significant rainfall since early July.

The drought is the worst since 1891 when meteorological records began in Chongqing, now hosting a population of 30 million, and had brought direct economic losses totalling 6.5 billion yuan ($817 million), Xinhua said.

Heat and drought had also hit the neighbouring province of Guizhou, the eastern provinces of Zhejiang, Anhui and Jiangxi, and the central provinces of Hunan and Hubei, Xinhua said.

Temperatures of up to 42.4 degrees Celsius (108.3 degrees Fahrenheit) were recorded in Chongqing on Thursday, after a high of 43.4 C on Wednesday.

Chongqing city, the industrial heart of the municipality with a population of 12 million, reported a record high of 44.5 C on Aug. 16.

Some 18 million people have been short of drinking water and 11 million hectares of crops, mostly rice but including corn and tobacco, have been destroyed or damaged, Xinhua news agency said. "The drought is a rarity in history in terms of the time it has lasted, its extent and the huge damage it has caused," Xinhua quoted the top drought relief official, Er Jingping, as saying.

No deaths have been reported.

More than 4,000 people have been fighting a forest blaze that had ravaged parched timber since Wednesday in the north of Chongqing, which reported 97 forest fires in August, Xinhua said.

The impact has been broad. Crop production is down and vegetable prices are soaring.

But millions of schoolchildren and teachers have seen the start of term postponed due to the latest heatwave which is expected to last at least until Monday.

Authorities had successfully prevented farmers clashing over water, either for drinking or irrigation, Xinhua said.

Some coal traders, trying to profit from the disaster, have sold coal adulterated with anything from pebbles to limestone to power plants as prices rise.

"Generators were seriously damaged and kept having to halt operation, worsening the already strained electricity supply," Xinhua quoted a local official as saying.

China’s east and southeast have already been repeatedly battered by typhoons and floods this summer, killing more than 1,000 people.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/PEK22595.htm