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Description of schemes.
(a) The Aberdeen Valley Water Scheme.
(b) The Sheng-mun water scheme.
Despite extensive developments in the reservoir system of Hong Kong it has not been possible to keep abreast of the ever-growing demand for water,
for the increasing population on the island of Hong Kong and the developing urban area in Kowloon on the mainland opposite. During periods of drought the supply has always been precarious and the cause of much anxiety.
The last two summers have witnessed
a period of abnormally low rainfall.
A number of schemes have been put forward to meet this situation: the present proposals are concerned with two of these.
(a) The "Aberdeen Valley" scheme offers a new source of supply within the Island and thus possesses obvious advantages from the points of view of
convenience and of defence.
The scheme provides for the resumption of the Colony's water rights in the Aberdeen Valley (on the South of the Island), an area where these had been alienated for commercial purposes at a time when the rapid expansion of Hong Kong was not foreseen. Governmentis taking over a storage reservoir with a capacity of 92 million gallons constructed by the Tai Shing Paper Manufacturing Company, on payment
The
for
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