Sichuan province, Chongqing municipality: In this photo taken on 29 April, part of the Yangtze river's bed is exposed as the water level drops due to drought. Much of central China is enduring its worst energy crisis in years, with factories and residents facing power cuts as supply runs short of demand, a problem worsening as drought dries rivers, reducing hydroelectric capacityPhotograph: APSichuan province, Three Gorges reservoir: This photo shows how the waterline of the Yangtze river has dropped about 10 metres due to severe drought that has rendered nearly 1,400 reservoirs in Hubei province temporarily unusable, devastated farm fields and made drinking water scarcePhotograph: Imaginechina/CorbisHubei province, Yichang city, Three Gorges dam: Cargo vessels sail in front of the Three Gorges dam. On 9 May the water level of the Three Gorges reservoir dropped to 154.77m. Authorities have decided to increase the dam's water dischargesPhotograph: Zheng Jiayu/Corbis
Hubei province, Honghu city: A fisherman tries to paddle his boat through a small stream amid the partially dried-up fishery in the Honghu lake, Hubei province. The Yangtze river, China's longest, has been plagued by a severe drought, with the lowest level of rainfall since 1961Photograph: Stringer/ReutersHubei province, Honghu city: A fisherman rides a motor tricycle to transport dead fish killed by drought at his fish farm at Honghu lakePhotograph: Kevin Zhao/ReutersHunan province, Huarong county: Huang Xiaohe conveys water collected from an adjacent canal to water his field. Since early May, Huarong county of Hunan province and Shishou city of Hubei province have pumped water from the Yangtze river to the Huarong river in an attempt to ease the water shortagePhotograph: Li Ga/CorbisHunan province, Yueyang city: A farmer looks at his farmland's dried out earth and withered crops caused by severe drought in Junshan district. The drought has disrupted drinking water supplies to more than 320,000 people and dried up 3,000 square kilometres of farmland, according to statistics from the local authoritiesPhotograph: Long Hongtao/CorbisHunan province, Yueyang city: Ships grounded in the Dongting lake because of the low water level, caused by the droughtPhotograph: Long Hongtao/CorbisHunan province, Changsha city: The naked riverbed is seen in the Changsha segment of the Xiangjiang river in Changsha. This segment of the river has suffered a drought since the beginning of this year. The water level here fell to 25.78 meters on 22 April, approaching the water supply warning line of 25.1 metres.Photograph: ZUMA/Rex FeaturesHubei province, Shiyan city: The naked riverbed is seen in Danjiangkou reservoir on Han river. The Danjiangkou reservoir, a water supply to China's South-to-North Water Diversion Project that transfers water from south China region to the north, has abnormally low water levels due to the drought. On 5 May, the water level here stood at 135.11 metres, four metres lower than the 139-metre dead water levelPhotograph: Zhang Xinjun/CorbisHubei province, Shiyan city: Vessels anchored along the banks of the Han river. The drought has caused the water level of the Yunxian section of Hanjiang river to fall severelyPhotograph: Rex FeaturesHubei province, Wuhan city: Local residents walk along the bare bed of the Yangtze river during a drought in Hankou. The drought has lowered the water levels in the middle section of the Yangtze river, to near record lows, local authorities saidPhotograph: Imaginechina/CorbisHubei province, Wuhan city: Farmers look at the dried-up North lake in Huangpi district on 9 MayPhotograph: Feng Zi/EPAHubei province, Wuhan city: A Chinese worker fires rockets for cloud seeding in an attempt to make rain in Huangpi on 10 MayPhotograph: STR/AFP/Getty ImagesHubei province, Macheng city: Villagers water fields with water supply from a trunk on 4 May. Since November 2010, one third of Hubei province's counties and cities have suffered serious water shortage. Some local farmers have given up planting rice for crops suitable for dry land, like cottonPhotograph: Cheng Min/CorbisJiangxi province, Poyang lake: A boat is stranded on the cracked bed of the lakePhotograph: China Daily/ReutersJiangxi province, Nanchang city: A grounded vessel in Nanchang section of Ganjiang river, Jiangxi province, east China. Major rivers in Jiangxi, including the Ganjiang river, the second largest tributary of the Yangtze river, and the Fuhe river, which flows into Poyang lake, have recently recorded their historical levels of the same period. Since late March, the drought has affected about 434,667 hectares of paddy fields in Jiangxi, where precipitation has hit a record low in the past few monthsPhotograph: ZUMA/Rex FeaturesJiangxi province, Jiujiang city: Water levels have sunk as low as 10ft in the main thoroughfare of the 3,900-mile Yangtze river that stretches from the glaciers of the Tibetan plateau to the coastal city of Shanghai. The rivers management office has now closed a 140-mile stretch of the river above Wuhan to ocean-going vessels because of the shallow water. It also said the river is 160 feet narrower in key sections than it was last yearPhotograph: Imaginechina/CorbisAnhui province, Xuancheng city: A worker digs a canal within a riverbed on 5 MayPhotograph: Li Xiaohong/CorbisJiangsu province, Nanjing city: A dock on the Yangtze river. Because of the drought, the highest and lowest water levels of the Nanjing reach along the Yangtze river are both one metre less than normal Photograph: Wang Xin/Corbis
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