Special
report: Strong
Earthquake Jolts SW China
BEIJING, May 15 (Xinhua) -- Minister of Water Resources Chen Lei said here
on Thursday that damaged water infrastructure, including reservoirs and
hydropower plants, posed serious threats to flood control and security in
earthquake-stricken regions, particularly in the hardest-hit province of
Sichuan.
Chen, who is also head of the ministry's command center for disaster rescue
and relief operations, said the southwestern province had a large number of
reservoirs, many of which had sustained significant but still unknown damage
during Monday's 7.8-magnitude quake.
Also unknown was the extent of damage to hydropower plants owing to
inadequate management systems and poor data collection, he said.
It was crucial to prevent secondary disasters and control floods at damaged
reservoirs, hydropower plants and dikes, he stressed.
He noted that it is necessary to study and judge potential dangers at these
facilities by analyzing satellite and other aerial images.
If necessary, downstream residents should be evacuated, he said.
Earlier in the day, the Water Resources Ministry said the Zipingpu dam,
near the quake epicenter in Wenchuan County is structurally stable and safe.
But the multi-functional facility sustained a range of damage during the
quake, including cracks at the top and collapsed workshops, according to the
Emergency Response Office of the Sichuan Provincial Government.
Another key water project in Sichuan, the Dujiangyan irrigation system,
which was more than 2,000 years old, was also reported safe after Monday's
quake.
Sichuan has other major water projects, including the south-to-north water
diversion project and the Three Gorges Dam, both of which reported no impact
from the quake.
The devastating quake was centered in Wenchuan County, 159 kilometers
northwest of Chengdu, Sichuan's capital. The death toll as of Wednesday
afternoon was put at 14,866.