Just before conducting the water census, China estimated that it'd up to 50,000 waters inside of its boundaries. But the studies of the three-year study indicate that that number is clearly 22,909. That is a loss of more than 27,000 rivers with a total water volume that would be about the exact carbon copy of the Mississippi River. That's a significant amount of water to possess totally vanished. So just what happened to all of the rivers? China blames their disappearance on two facets a' obsolete mapping techniques and world wide climate change. In a meeting with the South China Morning Post, China's Deputy Director of the Ministry of Water Resources, Huang He, mentioned that the original estimate was probably too much due to incorrect topographic maps that trace their origin back again to the 1950s. He also recognized that climate change has generated the loss of both water and earth through the duration of China. Environmental activists are not certain, but. While many admit that better mapping engineering has no doubt led to a far more accurate stream count, there is a widely held opinion that China's booming economy and terrible document on protecting the environment both had a huge effect on the loss of these waterways. This really is evident in the slow, but steady, drop in water levels on the country's two longest rivers, the Yangtze and Yellow. Considering how fast China's population is growing and its towns and cities are modernizing, there's great fear that the almost 23,000 rivers that do exist there will not be sufficient to meet up the demands added to them in the 21st century and beyond. To produce matters worse, many of those waters already are considerably polluted, that will likely lead to a number of other health conditions as time goes on. China won't be the only real country coping with water shortages as time goes by if climatologists are to be assumed. Climate change is drying up rivers throughout the world, not to mention changing weather patterns and creating droughts. The distinction is that most other nations do not have a population anywhere near the size of China's and most are not inflicting as much harm on their rivers whilst the Asian country. Predicting what the near future holds is a difficult proposition. But lets hope that when China takes its 2nd National Census of Water it does not lose more than half of its rivers once again. [Photo Credit: Luo Shaoyang via WikiMedia] Submitted under: Activism, Asia, China, Ecotourism, News
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