Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Receding water levels of Yangtze in China reveal three Buddhist statues as heatwave continues

Forecasters have warned the sweltering conditions could last well into September amid fears of a "grave situation" in the Sichuan province over the loss of water to the hydropower system.

Monday 22 August 2022 
A once submerged Buddhist statue sits on top of Foyeliang island reef in the Yangtze


Falling water levels of the Yangtze River in China has revealed a submerged island with three Buddhist statues believed to be 600 years old.

Parts of the Yangtze - the world's third longest river - has been drying up amid a severe heatwave which has led to the issuing of a nationwide drought alert.

The three statues were found on the highest part of the island reef in China's southwestern city of Chongqing.

One of the statues on the island - called Foyeliang - depicts a monk sitting on a lotus pedestal.

The heatwave is the most extreme in six decades and has seen temperatures regularly exceed 40C (104F) in a number of cities.

Forecasters have warned the sweltering conditions could last well into September amid fears of a "grave situation" in the Sichuan province over the loss of water to the hydropower system.

Authorities have been working to maintain power and find fresh water to irrigate crops ahead of the autumn harvest.

The severe heatwave across the Yangtze basin has been caused by a larger-than-usual Western Pacific subtropical high.

It has lasted for over two months, reducing hydropower supplies and parching large expanses of arable land.

The Yangtze River supports about a third of the country's population.



Officials in Beijing have warned of the increasing risk of extreme weather in China as a result of climate change - while heavy rainfall has continued to take its toll in other parts of the country.

Water levels on the main trunk of the Yangtze and the flood basin lakes of Dongting and Poyang are now at least 4.85 metres (16ft) shallower than normal - and the lowest on record for the period, officials have said.

Rainfall in the basin has been around 45% lower than normal since July, according to forecasters.

Factories shut down as heatwave hits hydropower in China’s Sichuan province

Tesla, Toyota and Foxconn are among the multinational companies affected by a cascading water and energy crisis


The Three Gorges Dam, downriver from drought-hit Sichuan in Hubei province, China (Pic: Kyla Duhamel/Flickr)

By Alok Gupta
Published on 22/08/2022

From May to July, heavy rainfall flooded Sichuan, China’s hydropower hub resulting in surplus power production. A month later, the region is drought-stricken, with reservoirs dried up, power generation disrupted and factories ordered to shut down.

Hundreds of industries including component suppliers for Toyota, Foxconn and Tesla closed for six days last week. Next, provincial authorities restricted household electricity use.

Drying up the rivers and reservoirs are the heatwaves that began in mid-June and continue to sweep through southern China. Such a prolonged period of heatwave stretching for more than 60 days is happening for the first time since 1961, ramping up household demand for electricity.

“The extreme long lasting heatwaves have driven up cooling demand by 20% combined with low hydropower output due to 50% lower than normal precipitation,” said Yan Qin, an analyst with Refinitiv.

Temperatures have reached 40C in more than 10 provinces, including Sichuan, Henan, Zhejiang, Jiangsu and Anhui. In a few places, the mercury touched 45C.

Sichuan, China’s largest and most reliable hydropower producer, with around 90 GW of installed hydropower capacity, fulfills 80% of the province’s power demand. It also supplied uninterrupted power when the country faced a coal shortage last year that caused outages in a few provinces.

This year’s hydropower shortage might prompt the government to rethink its energy policy. With a 16% share in the country’s energy mix, hydropower is a crucial pillar in China’s efforts to achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. In response to the latest crunch, the government is boosting coal generation as an alternative.

The crisis hasn’t come without warning. “We had predicted that climate change, in the current case, causing an extreme weather event, will affect hydropower potential in China,” Qiuhong Tang, a Chinese Academy of Sciences professor, told Climate Home.

Tang and his colleagues, in a study in 2016, estimated that climate change could reduce hydropower potential by 2% in China during 2020-2070. “But in Sichuan, the loss would be up to 10%.”

Rising temperatures are changing rainfall and evaporation patterns in China. As a result, models project a decrease in annual average runoff for most river basins, particularly in the southern areas.

In the recent weeks, “the heatwave also led to fast evaporation of the river and reservoirs,” Qin added, leading to a sharp drop in water levels.

Can China capture excess rainwater during March-June in its dams to generate hydropower in the lean season? Even if the country stores the excess water during the wet season and transfers it for the dry season, said another study, hydropower generation in the Yalong basin “would be reduced by 4 to 6% compared to the baseline period”.

“This change will largely affect the energy generation in Chongqing and Sichuan, which rely heavily on the Yalong River for hydropower generation,” said the authors.


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Urgent adaptation measures are required to deal with the loss of hydropower potential, Tang added. “Government needs to engage more climate scientists and policymakers to deal with the situation, else a source of clean energy that could help the country meet its climate goals will face serious loss.”

“For hydropower, storage management is crucial. Store water when demand is low and generate power from it when demand is high. Climate change affects both electricity demand and inflow into the reservoirs, potentially creating a demand and supply gap,” said Nathalie Voisin, Chief Scientist at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, US.

“In some regions, inflows are happening earlier than before, which might be difficult to store until the peak summer months, cascading a water crisis into a power crisis,” she said.

Weather data shows the flood season in southern China began two weeks earlier than usual, and average rainfall hit levels that have not been seen since 1961. And when the heatwave began in mid-June, the water level in Sichuan’s reservoirs started declining, unable to meet the peak summer demand.

“Climate change is challenging hydropower reservoir management worldwide,” added Voisin.

Meanwhile, companies facing significant production losses due to frequent lockdowns imposed as a part of China’s zero-covid-19 policy are getting desperate. Shanghai officials sought priority power access for Tesla suppliers in Sichuan province, sparking a backlash on social media from residents suffering from the power outages.

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