Archive for June 11th, 2011

Chinese Mandarin – Chemical spill contaminates E. China river, affects supplies of drinking water – Chinese News

Saturday, June 11th, 2011

A recent chemical spill on the Xin’an River, a major source of drinking water for east China’s Zhejiang Province, has led five water utility companies to stop drawing water from the river, a spokesman with local environmental protection bureau said Monday.

As of noon on Monday, water supplies for at least 552,200 people living in counties and cities near the provincial city of Hangzhou have been affected, said Lao Xinxiang, a deputy director and spokesman for the Hangzhou Environmental Protection Bureau.

Authorities have been closely monitoring the river since late Saturday night, when a tanker truck overturned on a highway near the river, resulting in the spillage of the truck’s load of carbolic acid. The chemical was washed into the river by heavy rains.

The Xin’an River, which feeds into the Fuchun and Qiantang rivers, is the main source of drinking water for several cities in Zhejiang, including Hangzhou.

The Xin’an River dam has been discharging water at an increased rate of 1,239 cubic meters per second to dilute the spill. The previous water discharge rate was 268 cubic meters per second.

The river’s concentration of carbolic acid, an industrial chemical used to create plastic and other materials, has dropped because of discharges of water in the upper reaches of the river, which have diluted the chemical.

Although supplies of drinking water in downtown Hangzhou have not been contaminated, some citizens have rushed to purchase bottled water, causing some supermarkets in the city to run out of bottled water.

The Hangzhou city government has called on citizens to store some water for daily usage.

Chinese Mandarin – Chinese wrap up glutinous rice, cherish traditions on Duanwu Festival – Chinese News

Saturday, June 11th, 2011
A man teaches a child to wrap a zongzi (rice dumplings) in Haiyou, capital of south China’s Hainan Province, June 4, 2011. As the Duanwu Festival draws near, handmade Zongzi, a kind of traditional food for the festival, became more and more popular. The Duanwu Festival, also known as Dragon Boat Festival, falls on June 6 this year. (Xinhua/Guo Cheng)

BEIJING, June 4 (Xinhua) — As the Duanwu (Dragon Boat) Festival is to fall on Monday, Chinese housewives spent Saturday wrapping up glutinous rice with reed leaves or buying red-made rice balls at restaurants and supermarkets.

Today the rice ball is an indispensable dish on the Chinese dinner table on the Duanwu Festival. Traditionally, however, it should be thrown into rivers to spare from the fish’s mouths the body of a poet who drowned more than 2,000 years ago.

The poet, named Qu Yuan, lived in the state of Chu during the Warring States period (475 BC to 221 BC). He drowned himself in the Miluo River in the central Hunan Province in 278 BC, hoping his death would awaken the king to revitalize their kingdom.

The date of Qu Yuan’s death, the fifth day of the fifth lunar month, has since been remembered as the Dragon Boat, or Duanwu, Festival. On that date, fishermen row dragon boats along the Miluo river to search for Qu Yuan and scatter glutinous rice balls in the water to prevent the fish and shrimps from eating his body.

The festival is celebrated throughout the country, featuring dragon boat races, rice ball cooking competitions, traditional art shows and herb harvesting to keep fit.