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Poisonous algae bloom threatens giant Chinese lake

A man collects snails from the algae-infested Taihu lake in Wuxi Jiangsu province in mid June 2007. Pollution-linked algae blooms have reappeared in Chinas third-largest lake prompting renewed fears for the drinking water supplies of millions of resi ...
A man collects snails from the algae-infested Taihu lake in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, in mid June 2007. Pollution-linked algae blooms have reappeared in China's third-largest lake prompting renewed fears for the drinking water supplies of millions of residents

A pollution-linked algae bloom has reappeared in China's third-largest lake, prompting renewed fears for the drinking water supplies of millions of residents, state press said Tuesday.
Taihu Lake in eastern China has seen a re-emergence of algae growth that last year forced authorities to cut water supplies to 2.3 million residents of the nearby city of Wuxi last May, the People's Daily said.

The lake in Jiangsu province, long celebrated through Chinese history as one of the country's most scenic bodies of water, has been massively polluted by the dumping of sewage and industrial and agricultural waste.

The water crisis last year made it a symbol of China's nationwide problem of deteriorating water quality, with even Premier Wen Jiabao publicly calling for the lake to be cleaned up.

Drinking supplies were cut off for days last year after residents complained of foul water coming out of their taps, causing a crisis that sparked panic hoarding of water.

Authorities now fear that could happen again in coming months, the People's Daily, the Communist Party's main mouthpiece, said in a story posted on its website.

Conditions were ripe for a recurrence of the problem, caused by a combination of pollution and warm weather, the paper quoted Lin Zexin, vice head of the Taihu Administrative Bureau, as saying.

"Cleaning up Taihu Lake's pollution will not be a short-term effort, but will be a protracted battle," he said.

Taihu is China's third-largest freshwater lake, covering a surface area of some 2,340 square kilometers (about 900 square miles).

Algae blooms are common on many Chinese freshwater lakes and are chiefly caused by untreated sewage containing high concentrations of nitrogen, a main ingredient in detergents and fertilisers.

Like much of China's environment, water quality has suffered severely amid the nation's breakneck economic growth over the past two decades.

More than 70 percent of China's waterways and 90 percent of its underground water have been contaminated by pollution, according to government figures.

© 2008 AFP
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Posted by vlam67 04/15/08 18:10
Rank: 5/5 after 2 votes
Humans lives has been, and will be dirt cheap in China for thousands of years and into the future.After all, it's only 2.3 millions out of 1.4 billions and growing by hundreds of thousands yearly. It's a mad scramble to be counted among the living over there. The PRC Communists attitude to environmental issues shows their commitment to the status quo and indirect population culling to keep the nation going into starvation, revolution, or both.
Posted by Bigfoot 04/16/08 09:11
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And people continue to pour their crap into their source drinking water. Brilliance in a bottle.
Posted by gmurphy 04/16/08 10:09
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consider also the current trend of rising food prices and the vulnerability of China's wheat and rice growing plains to the "dustbowl" effect, its disturbing to consider such possibilities but given the economic climate, even small problems could snowball.
Posted by moebiex 04/16/08 15:58
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Here is another situation where it might be possible to harvest the algae and run it through a digestion process to get the biogas- and/or possibly some biodiesel depending on the species. Then you've got an energy carrier, soil treatment, better quality, etc. Maybe it will need mixing to get the C:N ratio optimized but again- it would be at least a couple birds with one stone.
Posted by bfreewithrp 04/18/08 07:01
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In the News...What about Global Pollution? We should tackle world pollution first
http://www.quazen...--.17376
Is Global Warming, or Global Pollution the Issue?