Show Menu
Brasil de Fato
PORTUGUESE
Listen to BdF Radio
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • |
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Show Menu
Brasil de Fato
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • |
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture
Show Menu
Listen to BdF Radio
No Result
View All Result
Brasil de Fato
Home English BRICS

CLIMATE CHANGE

How China built its flood prevention program

In 2015, the country chose 16 cities to be part of a project to drain huge amounts of water

09.May.2024 às 17h47
Beijing (China)
From the newsroom

O maior parque-esponja de Shanghai: "Céu estrelado" - China Daily

Just under a decade ago, China launched an ambitious project to revolutionize its cities. The idea was to protect its populations from floods, which would become worse due to climate change. 

In 2015, China's Ministries of Finance, Housing and Urban-Rural Development and Water Resources identified 16 cities to implement sponge city pilot projects. In these locations, the control of rainwater runoff is bigger, increasing the capacity to absorb, retain and release rainwater when necessary.

That is achieved through measures ranging from building roads and sidewalks with permeable materials to green roofs and vegetated buffer zones. Permeable concrete can reduce surface runoff of rainwater, which can then be stored in underground reservoirs to be purified or discharged into rivers.

Green roofs reduce and purify rainwater. Rainwater can also be collected through pipes. Rain gardens, on the other hand, are areas that have a greater capacity to retain rainwater due to both being lowered and the composition of the soil and vegetation.

A study published in the scientific journal Elsevier analyzed sponge city projects in different Chinese cities such as Shanghai, Zhoushan, Suzhou and Xi'an. The research shows that rain gardens improve runoff by around 70%.

Limitations

In 2021, the World Bank calculated that 67% of the Chinese population lived in flood-prone areas in 640 cities. The country has determined that, by 2030, 80% of urban areas should be "sponges", absorbing and reusing 70% of the water from heavy rains. 

The thirty cities chosen to implement the projects will receive annual subsidies of 400 million to 600 million yuan ($55,3 mi and US$83 mi, respectively).

In the government work report presented by Premier Li Keqiang to the National People's Assembly in 2017, the sponge city idea was included as a priority. The report proposed “starting building over 2,000 kilometers of urban underground pipe corridors, initiating a three-year action to eliminate major flood-prone sections in urban areas and promoting the construction of sponge cities,” PM Li Keqiang highlighted in the report.

Architect and landscape designer Yu Kongjian, who is also a professor at Peking University and one of the leading researchers on the subject, told People's Daily that the idea is for designed drainage systems and natural ecosystems to complement each other. “We propose building a set of green infrastructures and using natural sponge systems to solve problems that engineering pipe networks can't solve. This nature-based solution is a multi-objective system thinking, of which solving water problems is just one of the goals.”

Edited by: Rodrigo Durao Coelho
Translated by: Ana Paula Rocha
Read in:
Portuguese
Tags: china
loader
BdF Newsletter
I have read and agree to the of use and .

More News

US interference

Hostile diplomacy: US embassy holds meetings and promotes Cuban opposition

dismantling

‘Without science there is no future’: thousands of Argentine scientists protest Milei’s neoliberal adjustment

VIJAY PRASHAD

Hundreds of millions are dying of hunger

China-Brazil AI plan

China-Brazil AI agreement reinforces t researches and infrastructure development

MST in Venezuela

Brazil’s MST starts series of debates with Venezuelan communes for agrarian reform

Going backwards

The Devastation Bill: proposal restricts the need for licensing process for non-titled or non-ratified areas

All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced, provided it is not altered and proper credit is given.

No Result
View All Result
  • Podcasts
  • TV BDF
  • Politics
  • Brazil
  • BRICS
  • Climate
  • Struggles
  • Opinion
  • Interviews
  • Culture

All original content produced and editorially authored by Brasil de Fato may be reproduced, provided it is not altered and proper credit is given.