| For 5 more years, Beijing won’t see Yangtze water |
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A plan to channel water into Beijing via the South-to-North Water Diversion Project has been postponed five years. The delay puts unprecedented pressure on the capital’s water resources, which have seen falling groundwater levels for years, Beijing water authorities said early this week. The South-to-North Water Diversion Project would divert 1 billion cubic meters of the Yangtze River into Beijing next year, which would somewhat relieve Beijing’s water shortage, Cheng Jing, director of the Beijing Water Authority, said. The reason for the delay is thought to be related to the redistribution of water and relocation of residents along the 1,400-kilometer channel that would link Hubei province with Beijing, Tianjin and neighboring provinces.
The city will also raise water prices this year. Chen said the government is expected to draw up price hike plans within the next two months. “The current prices are not sustainable for a city with a scarcity of water, said professor Wang Dangxian, a researcher with the China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research.
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