China's
environmental authorities were redoubling efforts Monday to prevent a toxic
cadmium spill from further tainting water supplies of cities downstream, as
seven chemical company officials were reported detained in connection with the
accident.
Official reports have provided little
information about the exact cause of the spill, whose impact was first seen in
fish kills in mid-January. The contamination initially was blamed on a mining
company, but the official Xinhua News Agency reported late Monday that seven
managers of chemical companies had been detained on suspicion of responsibility
for unauthorised waste discharges.
Cadmium, used to make batteries, is poisonous
and can cause cancer.
The spill prompted residents of Liuzhou, a
city of 3.2 million in southwestern China's Guangxi region, to stock up on
bottled water, though officials said efforts to neutralise the cadmium were
keeping the water within safe levels and the city could use groundwater
reserves if water from local rivers and reservoirs becomes too contaminated.
Chinese rivers, lakes and coastal waters are
heavily polluted due to inadequate controls on industries, runoff from farms
and urban sewage. The area near Hechi, the city upstream on the Longjiang
River, where the cadmium was first detected, has seen repeated spills from
smelters and miners operating in the area.
Many rural areas of central and southern China
are heavily dependent on mining and smelting. Polluters are often state-owned
companies with strong political influence that makes enforcement of pollution
controls difficult at the local level despite top-level government pledges to
improve environmental protection.
The Guangxi Jinhe Mining Co. initially was
reported to be the suspected main cause of the contamination because its waste
disposal continually failed to meet government standards despite repeated
citations, the newspaper China Business News reported.
According to industry websites, the company, a
subsidiary of Guangxi Nonferrous Metals Group, makes zinc ingots and zinc oxide
used as white pigment for rubber, cosmetics, medicine, ceramics and glass.
Cadmium naturally occurs in zinc ore and is a toxic byproduct of smelting.
But Feng Zhennian, a regional environmental
official, named only one company - Jinchengjiang Hongquan Lithopone Material
Co. Ltd in Hechi, in announcing the detention of the seven chemical company
managers, Xinhua reported. Feng mentioned no other companies and did not name
those detained, it said.
Lithopone is a mixture of barium sulfate and
zinc sulfide that also is used as a white pigment.
The cadmium had polluted a 100 kilometer
(60-mile) stretch of the Longjiang River at a level more than five times the
official limit of 0.005 milligrams per litre, the official Xinhua News Agency
reported Monday.
"It is a critical time right now as downstream
drinking water safety is in jeopardy, so we will take every measure possible
and optimise our strategies to bring down cadmium concentration levels,"
it quoted He Xinxing, Hechi's mayor, as saying.
TV reports and photos showed soldiers dumping
into the river bags of bright yellow aluminum chloride, a neutralising agent,
into the river.
Seven factories and mines handling heavy
metals were ordered to suspend operations as a precaution, according to reports
on the website of the Ministry of Environmental Protection.
Top level provincial officials cited in those
reports said that chemicals dumped into the river had helped reduce the cadmium
contamination to safer levels, though some communities living near the spill
were relying on barrels of water trucked in by the government.
Hechi and the surrounding area have been
repeatedly singled out for inadequate controls on pollution by cadmium, lead,
arsenic and other heavy metals. In 2006, a local "cleanup" campaign
involving thousands of people, that did little more than move rocks from mine
tailings around, drew national attention after some participants complained.
China has set a goal of reducing pollution by
lead, mercury, chromium, cadmium and arsenic by 15 percent of 2007 levels by
2015.
AP
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