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Most Lakes Across China Polluted Or Emptied Out By Humans

A stream in China, heavily polluted by a nearby chemical factory. Photo courtesy of AFP.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 01, 2006
About 75 percent of China's 20,000 natural lakes are suffering algae pollution, while the nation has lost nearly 1,000 lakes in the last 50 years due to human activity, state press said Wednesday. The major causes of the losses were industrial farming, overuse of water and pollution, which destroyed ecological systems in lake and wetland areas, Xinhua news agency said, citing Zhu Guangyao, Vice Minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration.

In addition, increasing population, industrialization and urbanization have had a severe impact on the biodiversity of lakes, it said.

Algae pollution, which saps the oxygen out of water and kills fish and aquatic life, was caused by an influx of waste water containing nitrogen, phosphorus and other harmful substances, it said.

In central China's Hubei Province, known as the "paradise of lakes", 217 lakes with an area larger than one square kilometer (0.4 square miles) and 522 smaller lakes have disappeared since the 1950s, Xinhua said.

The total size of natural lakes in Hubei had shrunk to 2,438 square kilometers, 34 percent less than 50 years ago.

More than 70 percent of rivers and lakes are polluted, while underground water supplies in 90 percent of Chinese cities are contaminated, previous reports have said.

Nearly 25 years of unbridled economic growth in China have come with little regard to the environment with the nation's water resources severely depleted and air pollution covering most of the country's urban areas.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
State Environmental Protection Administration Of China
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up
China News From SinoDaily.com

From River To Reef
Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Nov 01, 2006
CSIRO workshop in Brisbane this week will examine the quality and impacts of river water entering the Great Barrier Reef lagoon. The workshop, at Brisbane's Hotel Grand Chancellor tomorrow and Thursday (1 and 2 November), will discuss scientific tools critical to measurements of land sediments and nutrients flushed out from river catchments.







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