After 2 years, Yangtze cleanup is obvious
More than two years ago, the river was significantly polluted. Many illegal wharves that received building materials, such as sand and rocks, littered the shoreline and lowered the water quality.
The change for the better came when the concept of protecting the environment in the Yangtze River Economic Belt was formulated and given top priority by the central government.
Since 2016, the Luzhou city government has closed 73 illegal wharves, said Mao Yuanfei, an information officer with the city's information office.
To guarantee the quality of water, she said, the city has set up a so-called isolation net made of steel and cement in sections of the Yangtze where water would be drawn to water plants. The water was to be treated before delivery to the city's residents as drinking water. It has banned fishing boats in those sections.
- Relic dates Jinan founding to around 4,200 years ago
- New rocket set to debut soon, launch six satellites
- Taiwan's character of the year a vote against confrontation
- Wave of freezing weather brings snow to northern China
- APEC 'China Year' kicks off at Shenzhen meeting
- HKSAR chief executive says to conclude residential complex fire probe within 9 months

































