China’s
mounting ecological disaster: prelude to a water and economic crisis?
15
May, 2013
Steady
deterioration of water bodies is one of the most pressing problems
facing the world today. In Asia, degradation of water quality and the
problems it spawns are so extensive and serious that they are
threatening to harm economic growth and affect the health and quality
of life of billions of people.
China's
high economic growth has had an adverse impact in terms of access,
volume and quality of water as well as equity, management and
investment requirements. While the magnitude of the water quality
problem has steadily widened, planning, management and institutional
capacities have not improved commensurately, and thus complicated
matters further.
Water
scarcity and pollution of water sources are two of the most serious
problems for China. Pollution has now spread from the coastal region
to inland water bodies, affecting both surface water and groundwater.
More than 53 billion tons of (untreated or inadequately treated)
wastewater is discharged into China's water bodies every year. And as
early as 2006, water in a stretch of more than 25,000 km of rivers
failed to meet the quality standards for aquatic life and about 90
percent sections of rivers in and around urban areas were seriously
polluted. The World Bank estimates that water scarcity and pollution
are costing China about 2.3 percent of GDP - 1.3 percent due to water
scarcity and the rest as a direct impact of water pollution.
Water
quality is a bigger problem in North China, where shortage of water
prevents pollutant discharges from being diluted. In the northern
region, about 40 percent of the rivers have the two worst water
quality standards: grades V and VI. This means water is so highly
polluted that it is not only unsafe to drink (a serious health issue
in itself), but also very difficult and expensive to treat.
Pollution
is a serious problem in rural areas, too. Ministry of Water Resources
data show that more than 300 million people don't have access to safe
drinking water. While in terms of money the cost is a staggering 66
billion yuan ($10.72 billlion), the main cost is in terms of human
life as diseases like diarrhoea, cholera and cancer continue to
afflict people.
Although
the impact of water pollution on health is very serious, it cannot be
quantified because of lack of reliable data both on the pollutants
and the households that use poor quality water.
Water
pollution is also harming China's south-to-north water transfer
project. Along the "East Route", for example, industrial
pollution has affected many of the poorer areas of northern Jiangsu
and western Shandong provinces, delaying the construction of the
project. Speaking at a forum in September 2000, Zhu Rongji, then
premier, said the initial stage of the project should follow the
principle, "first save water, then transfer it; first clean up
pollution, then let the water flow; first protect the environment,
then use water". Unfortunately, more than a decade later,
pollution problems along the East Route have still not been fully
solved.
In
addition, industrial accidents and illegal dumping of wastes often
worsen the quality of water in rivers and lakes. Such incidents
include the Songhua River toxic chemical spill in 2005, the algae
bloom in Taihu Lake which polluted the source of drinking water for
people of the surrounding areas in 2007 and the dumping of more than
13,000 pig carcasses in the Huangpu River earlier this year.
The
government is aware of the challenges and the public is worried about
the associated health and environmental costs of water pollution.
Water pollution is a monumental problem today because relevant
officials ignored it over the years. And it will not be easy to solve
it in the short term.
Pollution,
aggravated by urbanization and industrialization, has intensified
water scarcity in China, and relevant governments have failed to
properly implement the existing policies to protect water sources and
fight pollution.
But
new and more stringent standards on treatment of drinking water
represent a good example of how to fight water pollution. According
to new regulations, from July 2012, drinking water treatment plants
in China have to measure up to 106 quality parameters compared with
only 15 previously. If properly implemented, this could significantly
improve the quality of drinking in the country.
But
the success of the new regulations will depend on multiple issues,
which include unifying the fragmented monitoring system; ensuring
that there are enough personnel and laboratory facilities to properly
test all the 106 parameters; guaranteeing reliable collection,
analysis and interpretation of data; making sure a well-oiled
infrastructure is in place to supply safe drinking water; and
ascertaining that officials in charge of plants not complying with
all the norms are punished.
China
and its people deserve the fruits of fast economic growth. But water,
air and other environmental problems, if not solved, could undermine
their future course of development.
Cecilia
Tortajada is the co-founder and president of the Third World Centre
for Water Management and former president of the International Water
Resources Association. Asit K. Biswas is distinguished visiting
professor at Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and co-founder of
the Third World Centre for Water Management.
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