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Nitrogen, phophorus threat to Yangtze
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2007-04/16/content_5981441.htm

2007-04-16

BEIJING, April 16 -- Excessive nitrogen and phosphorus are the major
water pollutants in the Three Gorges Dam area, the 2007 Yangtze Conservation
and Development Report has said.

The report on the Three Gorges Dam, the largest hydro-power plant in the
world, was released at the second Yangtze Forum held in Changsha, capital of
Central China's Hunan Province, over the weekend.

"Nitrogen and phosphorus, which come mainly from domestic disposals and
fertilizers, account for 60-70 percent of the pollutants in the Three Gorges
Dam area," said Weng Lida, of the Yangtze River Water Resources Protection
Bureau under the Ministry of Water Resources.

"Such pollution from non-point sources is very hard to control," Weng
said. "If the pollutants had been discharged by a few plants, they could
have been moved out of the area. But nitrogen and phosphorus are used by
millions of people living there, hence, it is difficult to ask them to stop
using substances containing the pollutants."

The excessive amount of nitrogen and phosphorus has caused rampant
growth of algae, which makes the water look like soy sauce, Weng said.

Statistics show that in 2004, over 75,000 tons of nitrogen-based and
25,000 tons of phosphorus-based fertilizer were used in the area. Added to
that were large amounts of phosphorus in detergents used by millions of
people living there.

There are no figures on the exact amounts of nitrogen and phosphorus
that flow into the Yangtze River in the area.

"Pollution has worsened after the Three Gorges Hydro-power Plant started
running," Weng said. "The water in the dam now flows at the speed of 1 or 2
centimeter a second, as a result it seems almost still. That to a large
extent has weakened the river's self-purifying capability."

The report warns against point-source pollution, such as those from
industrial plants, and floating-source pollution (from ships), too. In 2004,
for instance, the Three Gorges Dam area received about 500 million tons of
wastewater from industries, 2 million tons from domestic sources and another
2 millions from ships.

(Source: China Daily)

Editor: Bi Mingxin

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