Poison
the well: Chinese city fails to report huge toxic leak, cuts off
water to 1 million
Authorities
have cut off the water supply of over 1 million people in a northern
Chinese city due to an industrial leak. Residents were not notified
of the spill for days, despite the public health threat it posed.
RT,
6
January, 2013
Handan,
located in Hebei province, has seen its primary water supply cut off
since Saturday afternoon. The move followed an accident in nearby
Shanxi Province in which industrial chemicals spilled into the
Zhanghe River, Xinhua news agency quoted local officials as saying.
A
loose drainage valve at an industrial plant in the city of Lucheng
resulted in nine tons of the chemical Aniline spilling into the
river. An additional 30 tons of the chemical were contained in a
disused reservoir.
Aniline,
which is used as a precursor in the manufacture of pigments,
herbicides and polyurethane, can be toxic to humans.
The
leak was first spotted by employees at the Tianji Coal Chemical
Industry plant during a routine check on December 31, Xinhua quoted a
company spokesperson as saying.
Screenshot from AP video
Scores
of dead fish were reported in the river as early as Friday evening,
though there have been no reports of human causalities.
While
the city of Handan has cut off its water supply from the tainted
reservoir located on the river, and switched to another underground
water source, residents may have been exposed to the tainted water
for around five days.
It
is not known why the contamination alerts were delayed for such an
extended period of time. News of the incident has led local residents
to buy up bottled water from local supermarkets en masse.
"Since
the pollutants won't decompose easily, it will likely take weeks to
solve the problems caused by the spill," Zhang
Xiaojian, a professor at the environmental school of Tsinghua
University, told Xinhua.
Wide-scale
economic growth in China has led to a number of large factories being
built along rivers. Poor environmental controls at these factories
and relatively lenient punishments for accidents has led to a rash of
similar incidents in recent years.
In
January 2011, the water supply for the city of Liuzhou was cut off
after industrial waste spilled into the Longjiang River in south
China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.
And
in 2010, the Songhua River in northeast China's Jilin Province was
polluted after floodwaters swept warehouses owned by two chemical
manufactures, spilling contaminants into the river.
Screenshot from AP video
Screenshot from AP video
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