Authors
Changhua Wu, Crescencia Maurer, Yi Wang, Shouzheng Xue, Devra Lee Davis
Publication date
1999/4
Source
Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume
107
Issue
4
Pages
251-256
Description
China's extraordinary economic growth, industrialization, and urbanization, coupled with inadequate investment in basic water supply and treatment infrastructure, have resulted in widespread water pollution. In China today approximately 700 million people--over half the population--consume drinking water contaminated with levels of animal and human excreta that exceed maximum permissible levels by as much as 86% in rural areas and 28% in urban areas. By the year 2000, the volume of wastewater produced could double from 1990 levels to almost 78 billion tons. These are alarming trends with potentially serious consequences for human health. This paper reviews and analyzes recent Chinese reports on public health and water resources to shed light on what recent trends imply for China's environmental risk transition. This paper has two major conclusions. First, the critical deficits in basic water supply and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
C Wu, C Maurer, Y Wang, S Xue, DL Davis - Environmental Health Perspectives, 1999