Reuters 4 Jan 10;
BEIJING (Reuters) - A spill of around 150,000 litres of diesel oil from a broken pipeline in northwestern China into a river has started reaching the Yellow River, but drinking water is safe for now, state media said on Monday.
The leak, from a pipeline owned by China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) in Shaanxi province, was discovered on Wednesday.
The company turned off the tap when the accident happened, according to state media, but not before some of the diesel ended up in the Weihe River, a tributary of the Yellow River, a major water source for millions of people.
Despite the efforts of hundreds of people using barrages and other methods to clean up the diesel, the pollution had reached the Yellow River, the official Xinhua news agency said on its website (www.xinhuanet.com).
The populous but poor province of Henan is the first to have been affected, the report said, and the local government had begun taking emergency measures to guarantee safe drinking water, though say there is no need for alarm just yet.
"At present, cities along the river in Henan province have sufficient water resources," Xinhua said.
The province "will work all out to deal with the situation and ensure the safety of drinking water for cities along the Yellow River," it added.
The teaming provincial capital of Zhengzhou is one of the cities which relies on the Yellow River.
The province is setting up additional testing stations along the river and will test the water quality hourly, Xinhua said.
China periodically faces spills into rivers that result in water supplies being cut off, most seriously in 2005 when an explosion at an industrial plant sent toxic chemicals streaming into the Songhua River in the northeastern city of Harbin, forcing the shutdown of water supplies to nearly 4 million people.
Run-off from heavy fertiliser use, industrial waste and untreated sewage also caused a foul-smelling algae bloom on a lake in the southern province of Jiangsu in 2007 that left tap water undrinkable in a city of more than 2 million.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Nick Macfie)
China water warning as oil spill hits Yellow River
BBC News 3 Jan 10;
Pollution from a broken oil pipeline in northern China has now reached one of the country's major water sources - the Yellow River, state media say.
Hundreds of workers had battled to contain the oil upstream, but officials discovered traces in the river itself.
The traces were found about 200km (124 miles) upstream from Zhengzhou.
Three counties in neighbouring Shaanxi province have warned people not to take supplies from the river or drink river water.
Correspondents say local towns and cities get some of their water from the river, the rest from underground water sources.
Floating dams
The official Xinhua news agency said: "At present, cities along the river in Henan province have sufficient water resources."
About 150,000 litres of diesel poured into the Wei river in Shaanxi province after a construction accident on Wednesday, state media reported.
Map
The leak occurred on the fuel pipeline operated by the state-run China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) that connects Lanzhou in the north-west province of Gansu with Zhengzhou in central Henan province, according to the China Daily newspaper.
The diesel first went into the Chishui river, a tributary of the Wei.
Around 700 emergency workers are said to be labouring round the clock, using floating dams and solidifying agents to contain the spill.
Their task has been helped by the current cold weather in the region.
China diesel spill reaches Yellow River
posted by Ria Tan at 1/05/2010 07:20:00 AM
labels freshwater-ecosystems, global, oil-spills