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Millions more face relocation from Three Gorges Reservoir Area
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At least four million people from the Three Gorges Reservoir area are to be relocated to cities in the next 10 to 15 years, according to Vice Mayor Yu Yuanmu of Chongqing Municipality.

Under the 2007-2020 rural and urban development plan of Chongqing, which was approved by the State Council on Sep. 20, the resettlements were necessary to protect the ecology of the reservoir area, said Yu.

The country's most populous municipality was set for vigorous urban expansion.

More than four million people currently living in northeast and southwest Chongqing, where the Three Gorges Reservoir extends for 600 km, would be encouraged to resettle on the urban outskirts about an hour's bus ride from downtown Chongqing, according to a report on sina.com.

No details about the massive relocation are available, but Yu said the ecological safety of the Three Gorges Reservoir area was at risk from the growing population.

"On one hand, the reservoir area has a vulnerable ecological environment, and the natural conditions make large scale urbanization or serious overpopulation impossible here," said the official.

On the other hand, Yu said, the area was already suffering from overpopulation and poor conditions for industrial development.

In March 1997, the city, which sits on the upper reaches of the Yangtze River, was approved as a centrally-administered municipality, the fourth after Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin. It was expected to spearhead economic development in China's central and western regions.

Covering 82,000 square kilometers, the municipality has a population of more than 27.98 million, 55 percent of whom live in rural areas.

The city's gross domestic product reached 348.6 billion yuan (US$45.8 billion) in 2006. However, its growth has been seriously unbalanced. The per capita GDP of Wuxi county was 3,593 yuan last year, only a tenth of that in the developed Yuzhong District.

On June 7, Chongqing and Chengdu, capital of neighboring Sichuan Province, were selected by the National Development and Reform Commission, the country's top economic planner, as pilot cities to work towards coordinated and balanced development between urban and rural areas.

Planners estimate that Chongqing will have a population of 30 million, 16.15 million in urban areas, an urbanization rate of 53.8 percent by 2010, and the urban population will be 21.6 million of the city's total population of 31 million by 2020, an urbanization rate of 70 percent.

Last month, officials and experts admitted the Three Gorges Dam project had caused an array of ecological ills, including more frequent landslides and pollution, and if preventive measures are not taken, it could lead to an environmental "catastrophe".

Tan Qiwei, vice mayor of Chongqing, told a forum in Wuhan, that the shore of the reservoir had collapsed in 91 places and a total of 36 km had caved in.

Frequent geological disasters have threatened the lives of residents around the reservoir area, said Huang Xuebin, head of the Headquarters for Prevention and Control of Geological Disasters in the Three Gorges Reservoir.

Construction of the project has already necessitated the resettlement of at least 1.2 million people.

The dam, the world's largest water control facility, was launched in 1993, with a budget of 180 billion yuan (about US$22.5 billion).

Located on the middle reaches of the Yangtze River, the project comprises a 185-meter-high dam, completed in early 2006, a five-tier ship lock, and the reservoir.

(Xinhua News Agency October 11, 2007)

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