皇冠体育app

CHINA> Regional
Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-06-30 21:21

BEIJING: A serious drought has hit northwest 皇冠体育app's Gansu Province and led to a shortage of drinking water for 230,000 people, while rainstorms ravage the country's southern parts, according to provincial weather reports Tuesday.

Precipitation has been rare since May in the mountainous regions in central and east Gansu. In addition to causing water shortage for humans, the drought also affected 1.05 million hectares of farmland, said the provincial headquarters of flood control and drought relief Tuesday.

Related readings:
Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south Water, food shortages for 1.37m after drought
Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south Drought eases in 皇冠体育app's major grain production base
Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south Storms and downpours sweep 皇冠体育app, killing at least 50
Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south 皇冠体育app urged to step up flood, drought prevention

Drought plagues 皇冠体育app as downpour hits south South 皇冠体育app braces for tropical storm Nangka

In a bid to reduce the impact of the drought, local authorities in the affected seeded the clouds, repaired and constructed water conservancy facilities and mobilized local farmers to seek jobs in cities.

The Gansu observatory said the drought is expected to continue until mid July.

Guizhou and Zhejiang provinces in the country's south received the most rainfall so far this year.

The headquarters of flood control in Guizhou said Tuesday that two people have died and another person is missing as the province has been hit hard by torrential rains since Monday morning.

A total of 1,140 people in Guizhou were temporarily evacuated from their homes because of the rain, while hundreds of houses have collapsed and crops on 110,300 hectares have been damaged. Direct economic losses from the rains exceeded 70 million yuan (US$10.25 million), the headquarters said.

The headquarters expected casualties and economic losses could grow as it continues to rain.

The headquarters of flood control in Zhejiang has ordered a close watch on all reservoirs, ponds and dikes.