The Grand Canal | China's Future MEGAPROJECTS: Part 2
South-to-North
Water Transfer Project: The huge populations filling
China's northern megacities have a shortage of the single most necessary resource for life: water. To solve that problem, the
Chinese will soon be moving 44.8 billion cubic meters of fresh water each year from the wetter
South to the dryer
North.
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The huge populations filling the megacities in the North have a shortage of the single most necessary resource for life: water. To solve that problem, the Chinese will soon be moving 44.8 billion cubic meters of fresh water each year from the wetter South to the dryer North.
There will be three canals in the project, a 716 mile-long Eastern
Canal that will begin at the
Yangtze River and snake uphill, with the help of more than 20 pumping stations, to reservoirs in
Tianjin.
Route two will flow downhill from the
Danjiangkou Reservoir on the Han river 785 miles across the
North China Plain to
Beijing.
And the third route is the
Big Western Line.
It’s still in its planning phase, but it will divert water from the rivers flowing into the Yangtze, sending it to the
Yellow River instead.
The Central Government has rammed this project through despite many concerns over pollution and the forced relocation of hundreds of thousands of villagers. It’s also late and over budget due to the soaring costs of building bridges and tunnels for the canals to cross the many rivers and highways in its way. Then there are the fears that diverting water from the Yangtze River could cause the world’s third-longest river to run low, devastating those whose livelihoods depend on it.
One proposed solution to this problem is to give the Yangtze more water by redirecting rivers in southwestern
China. But this would affect
India,
Bangladesh,
Myanmar,
Laos,
Thailand,
Cambodia, and
Vietnam, potentially causing an international crisis.
For the immediate future though, the South-to-North water Transfer Project is a done deal.
Following the example of the
American West in the previous century, China has completely reshaped its environment using dams and canals, allowing for the arid North to support tens of millions more residents than it otherwise could.
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