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Post Info TOPIC: $57 million earmarked for relief efforts in Yunnan
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$57 million earmarked for relief efforts in Yunnan
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$57 million earmarked for relief efforts in Yunnan
 
The worst drought in 60 years that has left millions of people in
Yunnan province lacking drinking water has also fueled forest fires
and threatened local energy supplies.
 
A local official said late Sunday the drought has inflicted a direct
agricultural economic loss of 6.5 billion yuan ($952 million) in
Yunnan.
 
The province has earmarked 389 million yuan ($57 million) for drought
relief, said Zhou Yunlong, head of the provincial water resources
bureau.
 
The efforts have helped temporarily ease the shortage of drinking
water for 4.25 million people and 2.42 million livestock, as well as
irrigate 733 hectares of crops, Zhou added.
 
Two firefighters were injured when they struggled to bring two
mountain fires under control in the suburb of the provincial capital
of Kunming on Sunday.
 
Wang Bin, a firefighter who works for a mountainous park near Kunming,
needed an operation to remove the shrapnel from a fire extinguishing
bomb from his chest.
 
According to local government officials, one mountain fire started at
around noon on Sunday in the northwestern suburb of Kunming and was
under control by about 7 pm.
 
Another fire in the Shilin county of Kunming occurred at about 2 pm
and was finally put out at around 8:50 am yesterday.
 
"The fire was so strong and I could not get closer than 10 meters,"
said a forest guard surnamed Lin. "It is difficult to control the fire
with the changing wind direction and dry weather."
 
The drought and fires raised the alarm for many local sites. Zhang
Chengyong, who works for Dali Tourism Group in Yunnan, said it is
important to remain vigilant so a mountain fire does not endanger
Cangshan Mountain, a famous tourist site.
 
"No one entering the site is allowed to bring in a lighter," he said.
 
The drought might also effect energy supplies in Yunnan.
 
Wang Jinxian, an official with the Huaneng Lancang River Hydropower Co
Ltd, told China Daily yesterday: "The long-term drought had caused the
water level to drop, which might effect the electronic plant."
 
The drought, which began in July, has left 4.9 million residents and
3.34 million livestock with a shortage of drinking water.
 
More than 2 million hectares of crops, 81.7 percent of the total, have
been effected. About 534,600 hectares have been destroyed. As a
result, the province will suffer a drop of more than 40 percent in its
summer grain output.
 
The severe drought has forced residents to replant 135 hectares of
potatoes, corn, pulses and vegetables.
 
It also caused six times more forest fires and a 50 percent drop in
the generation of hydropower.
 
Yunnan's rainfall since last July was 29 percent, a record low, or 207
millimeters lower than the average, whereas the temperature was 1.7
degrees higher than average and even went beyond the highest level
since records began.
 
There will be no substantial rainfall in the short term, the Yunnan
provincial meteorological bureau said, warning that the drought will
not begin to lift until the raining season begins in May.
 
Xinhua contributed to the story

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