Anti-flood campaign readies for rainy year
25/5/2005 10:41
Shanghai Daily news
Shanghai is developing new standards in an effort to raise the protective
level of its anti-flood facilities, the city water authority said
yesterday. The emphasis for the upgrade is being centered on areas along the
coast and at the mouth of the Yangtze River, where many big factories have been
built in recent years. "Portions of the coastline have been eroded by tides
that are rising each year, posing a potential threat to these areas," said water
authority director Zhang Jiayi, who's also vice commander of the city's flood
control headquarters. Zhang also pointed out that the low drainage capacity
in downtown areas is insufficient to handle many summer storms, leaving large
pools of water on the roads. A draft version of the new standards was
finished recently and is now awaiting the government's final approval. The
new standards would qualify anti-flood facilities in coastal and riverside
areas, such as Changxing Island, Baoshan District's Luojing area and Waigaoqiao
area in Pudong, to cope with the highest tides and strong winds predicted to
occur every 200 years. Workers around the city are now preparing for the
coming rainy season. The anti-flood campaign starts formally on June 1 and runs
until the end of September. Meteorologists have forecast "abnormal" weather
this summer, with more rain and higher temperatures than in previous
years. Their worries seem to have already been confirmed. The first
thunderstorm this year took place on February 6, the earliest since
1949. Last month, the monthly average temperature was 18 degrees Celsius, the
highest in 133 years.
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