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Overflow begins at China's main quake lake

english.chinamil.com.cn 2008-06-08


The long-awaited drainage of China's Tangjiashan "quake lake" started at 7:08 a.m. Saturday, when its water flowed into a manmade sluice channel.

  MIANYANG, Sichuan Province, June 7 (Xinhua) -- The long-awaited drainage of China's Tangjiashan "quake lake" started at 7:08 a.m. Saturday, when its water flowed into a manmade sluice channel.

  A Xinhua reporter at the commanding center saw water passing the sluice channel via satellite monitor. The flow was rapid, steady and gradually increasing in volume.


An aerial photo taken on May 28, 2008 shows the Tangjiashan earthquake-induced lake near Beichuan County in Southwest China's Sichuan Province.

  The water level at the entry of the sluice channel was 740.37 meters above the sea level.

  The overflow has been estimated to occur Friday night when water level reached the lowest point of the blockage, but it was delayed by a 0.6-meter-high temporary dam erected on Friday afternoon to protect workers dredging the sluice channel.

  Some 100 armed police were airlifted to the quake lake dam top on Friday afternoon to widen and deepen the sluice channel.

  The swollen lake was formed by a massive landslide following the May 12 earthquake that jolted the country's southwest. It held more than 220 million cubic meters of water and posed a threat to about 1.3 million people downstream.

  Some 600 armed police and soldiers worked for six days and nights to dig a 475-meter channel to divert water from the lake.

  More than 250,000 people in low-lying areas in Mianyang have been relocated under a plan based on the assumption that a third of the lake volume breached its banks.

  Two other plans require the relocation of 1.2 million people if half the lake volume is released or 1.3 million if the barrier fully opened.

  The swollen quake lake has put China's longest oil pipeline at risk. The pipeline, winding from Lanzhou via Chengdu to Chongqing, was 60 kilometers downstream from the lake.

  With a capacity of transferring six million tons of oil each year, the pipeline provides 70 percent of product oil to Sichuan and neighboring Chongqing Municipality.

  If the line was cut, refined oil in storage could only supply Sichuan for three days, whereas repair work would take 30 days.

  


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