More than 1,2-million people in the central Chinese province of Hunan are facing a ”water crisis” after four weeks of drought and high temperatures, which are also straining power-generating capacity, state media said on Tuesday.
Hunan has received 25% less rain than normal and about half of its two million water-storage facilities are half-empty, while 859 reservoirs have dried up, the official Xinhua news agency said.
”The provincial capital, Changsha, has suspended power generation at all local hydropower stations to save water for drought relief,” it added.
The provincial meteorological bureau expects the heat to get worse before there is any substantial rain, with temperatures of up to 40 degrees Celsius for most of August, it added.
Neighbouring Jiangxi province is also suffering from drought, even as other parts of China have been deluged with rain and floods that have killed about 700 people so far this year.
Storms in northern Shanxi province have killed 20 people and destroyed more than 4 000 homes, Xinhua added.
In one county in the south of the province, it rained for 36 hours non-stop starting from Saturday evening, it said.
The rain is expected to continue into the weekend, the report said. — Reuters