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Water supply and sanitation in Taiwan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Piston water pump at theYingfeng Riverside Park inTaipei.

Water supply and sanitation in Taiwan is characterized by uneven distribution ofprecipitation and adense population.

Water resources

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TheZhuoshui River, Taiwan's longest river, runs from east to west.
Anaqueduct across theKeelung River.
A reservoir inDongyin,Lienchiang County

TheCentral Mountain Range is the main mountain range running from north to south of the island. Most of the rivers on the island flow from east to west following the contour of the mountains. Although the annual rainfall is up to 2,510 mm, which is 2.5 times higher than the world's average, the distribution of the rainfall is not even due to the geographical condition of Taiwan.[1]

In the period of 2000–2009, Taiwan had 95.07 billion tons of annual rainprecipitation. From there, 20.00 billion tons evaporated (21%), 70.10 billion tons becamesurface runoff (74%) and 4.97 billion tons becamegroundwater (5%). Added from groundwater overdraft of 0.63 billion tons, the total groundwater pumping was 5.60 billion tons. From the surface runoff water, 54.70 billion tons was discharged to the sea, 4.35 billion tons became water supply forreservoirs and 11.05 billion tons became river water diversion.[2]

Water scarcity

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Despite its high annual rainfall, Taiwan is only able to use 20% of it aswater resource, making it in the 18th place under theUnited Nations global ranking in terms of being water resource poor region.[3]

Kinmen

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Main article:Jinjiang–Kinmen Pipeline

InKinmen,water supply has been scarce over the past decades due to its shallow lakes, lack of rainfall and geographical constraints which makes buildingreservoirs anddams unfeasible. Water from reservoirs is barely enough to meet the demand during dry seasons. Therefore, Kinmen oftenoveruse itsgroundwater for up to 8,000 tonnes per day, causing risingtidal flood andsoil salinity.[4]

In early September 2013 after Kinmen Deputy CommissionerWu You-qin led a delegation to visit mainland China, the Chinese mainland government agreed to supply Kinmen with water fromJinjiang City inFujian. An undersea 16.7 km water pipeline will be built to carry water from theShanmei Reservoir in Jinjiang city to coastal area of Kinmen. The pipeline is expected to deliver a maximum amount of 30,000 tonnes of water each day to Kinmen. A further 300 meter of water pipe will be constructed to awater treatment plant.[5]

On 23–24 May 2015, Head ofTaiwan Affairs OfficeZhang Zhijun visited Kinmen to discuss the water supply plan from Fujian to Kinmen. The initial stage is to supply 15,000 m3 of fresh water a day, to be increased to 34,000 m3 a day in the medium-term and to 55,000 m3 in the long-term. The water company in Fujian will build a pumping station and pipeline to the coastal town ofBingzhou and the pipeline will be connected to a 17-km underground water pipeline to Tianpu in Kinmen which will cost NT$1.35 billion.[6]

Water consumption

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The annual per capita water allowance is 4,000 m3 and the current averagewater consumption per capita in Taiwan is 271 liter per day.[7][8] In 2001, the annual water usage for Taiwan was 18,600 million tons, which was divided intoagriculture (12,290 million tons), domestic (3,600 million tons), industry (1,750 million tons) and conservation (9,600 million tons).[9]

Reservoir water supply, river water diversion and groundwater pumping made up the total water consumption for Taiwanese, which was 21.00 billion tons in total. Among them, 3.53 billion tons was used for household consumption (20%), 1.66 billion tons was used for industrial consumption (9%) and 15.81 billion tons was used foragricultural consumption.[2] In 2023 drought forced cuts to agricultural water consumption.[10]

Institutions

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Taiwan Water Corporation headquarters inTaichung.

Taiwan Water Corporation is the state-ownedwater utility providing water supply to most of Taiwan.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Current situation and sustainability of water resource in Taiwan"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved2014-12-10.
  2. ^ab"Water Resources Utilization". Retrieved2023-11-08.
  3. ^"Plan needed to improve efficiency of water usage".taipeitimes.com. 25 November 2014.
  4. ^"Kinmen-Fujian water pipeline to be agreed at upcoming cross-strait talks".wantchinatimes.com.
  5. ^"China agrees to supply Kinmen Island with water". Taipei Times. 2014-05-12. Retrieved2014-05-19.
  6. ^"Fujian-Kinmen water project in the pipeline: Chinese official - Focus Taiwan".focustaiwan.tw.
  7. ^"Taiwan faces tough water choices | Guardian Sustainable Business | The Guardian". theguardian.com. 24 June 2011. Retrieved2014-12-09.
  8. ^":: 2nd Branch TAIWAN WATER CORPORATION ::".water.gov.tw.
  9. ^"Profile on Taiwan Water Resources"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2018-07-27. Retrieved2023-11-08.
  10. ^"Reservoirs still need water before rainy season ends".taipeitimes.com. Taipei Times. Retrieved20 August 2023.
  11. ^"About Us". water.gov.tw. Retrieved2014-12-09.

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