Several vehicles are trapped in a waterlogged street under the Locus Bridge
of downtown Beijing, July 10, 2004. A sudden strong rainstorm hit China's
capital city on Saturday afternoon and caused traffic problems at downtown
areas. The storm brought over 42 mm rainfall to the downtown places within one
hour and in the western part of the city the rainfall was more than 25
mm.--Xinhua
Beijing has returned to normal today after being hit by a flash rainstorm
last Saturday afternoon. However, the city's emergency response system couldn't
keep up with Saturday's downpour and many shortcomings in infrastructure
construction have been exposed. What needs to be done to strengthen Beijing's
ability to minimize disaster damages?
Departments related to city planning, traffic, electricity and flood
prevention in the capital experienced a sleepless night due to the weekend's
huge rainstorm, which resulted in injuries, collapsed houses and, if you can
imagine, even worse traffic jams in downtown areas, reported Tuesday's CRI
online.
Wu Zhenghua, expert on disaster prevention and reduction, says the existing
emergency response system still has some weak points despite the crucial
upgrades made during and after the outbreak of SARS last year.
"We have only individual emergency plans, but lack a comprehensive emergency
system. So our ability to deal with a huge rainstorm is low. Different
departments failed to cooperate with each other to deal with the rainstorm."
In fact, the downpour caused five houses to topple and severe leaks in an
estimated 4,700 others. And there were more than one hundred places along roads
and in residential complexes where rainwater pooled and a number of problems
ranging from very wet feet to monstrous traffic jams.
Urban planning expert from the School of Architecture of Tsinghua University,
Bian Lanchun says in addition to the emergency response system, the investment
into infrastructure construction in the city should also be stepped up.
"We should improve quality of old and even dangerous houses in old districts.
As for areas around downtown districts, drainage system should be improved to
deal with pressure brought by large amounts of rainfall and snowfall within a
very short period of time."
He adds that the infrastructure construction of a city is not as easy as
putting up a building--it is actually a huge systematic project. Therefore,
consistent efforts and investmenst are needed to guarantee a city develops all
necessary infrastructures.