The highest flood peak in this flood season on the Yangtze River has passed
through the Three Gorges Dam area as of yesterday.
The flood, the third in the season formed due to continuous rainstorms
upstream since mid July, poured into the reservoir in central China's Hubei
Province at a peak speed of 44,000 cubic meters per second Saturday afternoon.
It has slowed down as of yesterday morning and the speed is expected to drop
to 30,000 cubic meters per second in three days, according to Zhao Yunfa, a
senior engineer with China Yangtze Three Gorges Project Corporation (CTGPC).
Seventeen sluice gates have been opened to keep water level below the
designed 144 meters and to ease the flood pressure on the mid-lower reaches. At
present, the project is working normally, according to Zhao.
However, some 60 boats and more than 200 workers are trying to clear up a
large amount of floating plant roots, crop straws, rotten leaves and tree
branches flushed into the reservoir by the flood, preventing them from affecting
shipping and navigation.
The reservoir's water level has been allowed to fluctuate between 143.9 and
145 meters during the flood season this year, according to CTGPC.
The Three Gorges reservoir, the world's largest hydroelectric project, was
built on the Yangtze River, China's longest, to prevent floods and generate
electricity.