Overview. The Yangtze River Why build a dam (The government s perspective) The Three Gorges Dam (a guided tour) The opposing perspective

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Overview The Yangtze River Why build a dam (The government s perspective) The Three Gorges Dam (a guided tour) The opposing perspective September 2010

The Three Gorges Dam History: Dr. Sun Yat Sen, forerunner of China s democratic revolution, first proposed the construction of the dam in the three gorges back in 1919.. In an article written in both English and Chinese, he illustrated the benefits of this project in terms of power generating and navigation. Since 1954, Chinese and foreign scientists and engineers have devoted themselves to the planning, design and consulting work on the project. In April 1992, the National Peoples Congress approved the construction of the the Three Gorges dam on the Yangtse River as part of China s 10-year development program.

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People The Yangtse River (Chang Jiang or Long River), is the largest river in China and the 3rd largest river in the world. Only the Nile and the Amazon are longer. Only the Amazon and Congo Rivers carry more water. The river is formed in the glaciers of the Tibetan Plateau and begins it s 3,937 mile journey to the South China sea near Shanghai. Along the way, it cuts through the fabled Three Gorges.

The Yangtse River and it s People A place of ancient civilization, the Changyang culture belongs to the new Stone Age and has left a history of simple and colorful customs.

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People For thousands of years, trackers have pulled boats upstream in turbulent waters of the Yangtse.

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People The Yangtse River Valley, encompassing an area roughly 1/5 that of Canada, is China s agricultural and industrial heartland supporting about 400 million people (1/3 of China s population).

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People

The Yangtse River and it s People The three gorges area has over 200 miles of towering limestone cliffs.

The Yangtse River and it s People For centuries, the magnificent Three Gorges area has inspired literary men and women, poets and artists. Their work has been handed down from generation to generation.

The Yangtse River and it s People GuiYang in the Yangtze River Valley

The Yangtse River and it s People Shanghai at the mouth of the Yangtse

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Flood Control Throughout China s history, Yangtze floods have caused death and destruction. Severe flooding along China s Yangtze River is rapidly becoming a human tragedy of gigantic proportions. Millions of people have been driven from their homes by the floodwaters and many more are threatened with inundation if dykes and levees protecting cities and towns along the river give way. Wuhan, a major industrial city with a population of more than 7 million people, is in imminent danger. A flood in 1931 claimed 200,000 lives. One in 1887 killed and estimated 7 million people.

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Flood Control Since May, the government, army and population of the Peoples Republic of China have been heroically battling the most disastrous flooding there in 44 years. Torrential rains have flooded three of China s major rivers. Flooding on the Yangtze has caused at least $24 billion of damage. The disaster has claimed between 2,000-4,000 lives so far and has affected more than 240 million people - one fifth of the country s population. Over 14 million people have been evacuated, 17 million homes destroyed and 53 million acres of farmland flooded. ( Workers World 9/3/98)

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Hydroelectric Power China s is probably the country in the world with the greatest hydropower potential, and estimated 378 GW. Only about 10% of this potential has been developed. In 1987, hydropower represented almost 30% of China s total energy consumption. The dam will generate power to keep pace with China s economic growth. It is estimated that China s 1990 power capacity of 130 Million kw will grow to 580 million kw by the year 2015

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Reduced Pollution The Three Gorges Dam s annual power output is equivalent to: burning 50 million tons of coal or burning 25 million tons of crude oil. This will effectively cut 100 million tons of carbon dioxide, up to 2 million tons of sulfur dioxide, 10,000 tons of carbon monoxide, 370,000 tons of nitrogen oxide 150,000 tons of dust from the atmosphere The burning of sulfur-laden powder coal (of which China has a seemingly unlimited supply) helps make pulmonary disease the number one cause of death in China.

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Economic Development of Central China The dam will allow vessels up to 10,000 tons to travel 1,500 miles inland to Chongqing, opening up markets in the Yangtze watershed, where some 400 million people live.

Why Build a Dam The Governments Perspective Respect The Three Gorges Dam has become a symbol of unity and strength for the ruling communist party of the Peoples Republic of China. the damming of the Yangtse River is of great political and economic significance It proves to the whole world the Chinese people s ability in building the world s first rate hydroelectric project. says Li Peng, Many high ranking Chinese officials expect the dam to become a potent symbol of their nation's vitality in the new century and the new millennium.

The Three Gorges Dam Overview Diversion Channel Ship Locks Spillway Ship Elevator Power Generation Reservoir

Reservoir Navigation Dam

Left Bank Power Station Right Bank Power Station Spillway

Reservoir Navigation Dam

Reservoir Ship Locks Ship Elevator Navigation Dam

Yellow dots indicate locations where Dan took photos

The Great Three Gorges Dam Comparison with Hoover Dam Type: Concrete Arch Dam 4,360,000 cubic yards concrete 5 years of construction 17 Generators 2,074 Megawatts 122 Mw/ generator Width:.25 miles Reservoir Cap: 9.2 trillion gallons Type: Concrete Gravity Dam 34,290,000 cubic yards concrete 17 years of construction 26 Generators 18,200 Megawatts 700 Mw/ generator Width: 1.2 miles Reservoir Cap: 112 trillion gallons

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel Construction of the diversion channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

The Great Three Gorges Dam Diversion Channel

Left Bank Power Station

Power Generation The Three Gorges Dam will be the world s largest hydropower plant. 26 turbine generators (each one the size of a small nuclear power plant) 18.2 million kw Equivalent to 1/7 of China s total power output in 1992 Generators

Power Stations

Construction of Right Bank Power Station 2003-2009

Construction of Right Bank Power Station

The Great Three Gorges Dam 135M Reservoir filled to 135M in summer of 2003

6 generators being built into the rocks 14 12 Installed Capacity 32 generators: 22,500 MW

Spillway

Ship Locks

400 foot drop in elevation

Ship locks under construction. The five huge locks will lift ships of 10,000 tons, or the size of the Titanic, over 400 feet to the reservoir level. These are the largest locks in the world.

Ship Elevator

The shiplift is the world's largest. With a one-step vertical hoisting mechanism, the shiplift, equipped with a 120x18x3.5-meter container, is capable of carrying a 3,000-ton passenger liner or cargo boat.

Reservoir

It will submerge: 13 cities 140 towns 1352 villages 1600 factories

Submersion of Cities, Villages and Factories

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives)

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Project not universally supported in China When the dam was approved by the National People s Congress (NPC) in 1992, almost onethird of the normally compliant NPC delegates, in an unprecedented display of legislative dissent, either abstained or cast opposition votes. The decision making process on the dam project has been criticized by people who have dared speak out against the Chinese government, by exile Chinese and international organizations. The process has been far from democratic, and the opposition has not been able to present it s views. Dai Qing was jailed for 10 months for her views on the dam. Dai calls the dam the most environmentally and socially destructive project in the world. She also calls for a halt to construction and supports the idea of a series of smaller, less disruptive dams on the tributaries of the Yangtzi

3 months 4 months 5 months

3 months 4 months 5 months Generator Requirements = 600 950 M3/sec. 5000/950 (5000/600) = 5 8 generators operational out of 26 (32) during Dec - April

2008: 47%

Maximum: 65%

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Displacement of 1.9 Million People

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Resettlement of 1.9 Million People The people to be relocated will have to evacuate 200,000 acres of the richest land along the river basin and relocate in unknown, often inhospitable territory with lower living standards and where the local people resent them.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Many people forced to resettle, suffer from extreme hardship to work their way back up to the economic norms of the country. There is a prevalent feeling among low-level cadres and government workers, that it would be a wasted opportunity not to make some money out of the resettlement program. Once they have the money in their pockets, they voluntarily resign and disappear. Money intended for resettlement has been taken by corrupt officials. Historical Note: In 1989, the Ministry of Agriculture s poverty relief office acknowledged that roughly 70% of the country s 10.2 million reservoir relocatees were still living in extreme Poverty.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Lost Cultural Archeological Treasures No archaeologist, cultural anthropologist or sociologist was among the 412 experts who assessed the dam prior to construction. Since 1994, more than 1200 important archaeological sites have been identified as worth saving including what appears to be the seat of a little understood people known as the Ba, who settled in the region some 4,000 years ago. Over 30 Stone Age sites 30,000-50,000 years old will be lost. Minimal government funds have been approved for this effort. Perhaps 10-20% of the relics will be rescued before the reservoir is filled.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Loss of needed Farmland Much of the farmland lost to the reservoir has been tilled by the same Chinese families for centuries. This land is some of the most fertile in China. The land to where the population is to be relocated is much less fertile.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Flood Control or Hydroelectric Conflict The water level in the dam has to be kept low if flood security is to have priority, which means operating the power plant at less than it s maximum or design capacity.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Siltation Five hundred and thirty million tons of sand, pebbles and silt wash down through the Gorges each year and chances are that a large proportion will settle at the base of the dam. Sedimentation could impair the performance of the dam and substantially reduce the life span of the dam. The Sanmenxia dam on the Yellow River had to be rebuilt because of siltation. Today, the dam has 1/3 of the design water storage capacity and 1/4 of the power capacity. At the headwaters of the reservoir in Chongqing, the river will dump silt where the river presently sweeps it away. The harbor made deeper by the flooding will swiftly become shallow because of the new silt making it difficult for shipping.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Pollution Upstream Along the Yangtse, about 80% of cities do not have sewage systems. Officials estimate one billion tons of sewage will flow into the reservoir each year including human waste, industrial chemicals and heavy metals. The dam will dramatically slow the waterflow robbing the river of it s natural self-cleaning mechanism that now flushes sewage into the East China Sea. A sewage time bomb could start ticking under Chongqing as silt, no longer carried by rapid waters to the sea, builds up in the lake and blocks spillways for the waste water. Hundreds of factories where heavy metals and other pollutants have been dumped into the ground will be submerged releasing the pollutants into the reservoir. Stratification of chemicals will effect water quality in the reservoir

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Pollution Downstream Silt and sedimentation act as a natural fertilizers to the Yangtze River Valley. The dam reservoir will trap 75% of the sediments and more chemical fertilizers would have to be used to compensate for the loss of natural fertilizers. There chemicals may contain cancer causing agents and can saturate the ground water causing irreversible ground water contamination.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) The White Dolphin Also known as the Baji, the white dolphin is the Chinese rarest and most endangered water mammal species with approximately 300 in existence. It is found only in the Yangtse River. The dam will severely degrade what little remains of the dolphin s habitat. Other species are in danger or extinction including the Chinese Sturgeon and the Chinese Paddlefish. As lands and forests become submerged, thousands of invaluable animal species and most existing endangered species will have the possibility of becoming extinct.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Environment The forced relocation will cause an increase in deforestation and soil erosion as they are pushed onto overused land.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) China s History of Dam Building Since 1949, out of 86,854 dams built, 3,200 have collapsed. In 1975, a typhoon struck Henan Province in central China, causing reservoirs to swell behind dozens of dams. The massive Banquio and Shimantan dams collapsed along with dozens of smaller dams. Two hundred and thirty thousand people died.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Questionable Construction Allegations of corruption among officials involved with the project have raised fears of shoddy construction. Industry in China has been known to cut corners in construction, usually by substituting substandard safety materials. The project is rife with corruption, and a warning sign came in January 1999 when a new steal bridge in Chongqing, upstream from the dam, collapsed and killed 40 people, due to corrupt building practices. Cracks in the dam have reopened, senior inspector says May 30/2003 As China prepares to begin filling the Three Gorges reservoir on June 1, a senior member of the project inspection team has acknowledged that some of the cracks that were repaired at great expense on the upstream face of the dam have reopened.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Seismic/ Earthquake Concerns The dam reservoir s weight could induce and earthquake, triggering landslides and tidal waves in the reservoir. Reservoir areas are well known for landslides. A landslip of the limestone walls could cause waves 250 feet high which would surge over the dam and potentially destroy it. The dam itself sits on several seismic fault lines. Rupture of the dam would create a lethal tidal wave that would kill millions and cripple China for decades. Construction of the dam was likely to trigger seismic activity, Mr. Xu said, but there had been no serious problems with the first phase of filling the reservoir to the 135-metre level. As the reservoir is filled higher in the future, more and bigger shocks are anticipated. 21st Century Economic Report June 26/2003

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Strategic Vulnerability Germany s Mohne and Edler Dams were bombed and breached by the British in the Second World War. The Perucia Dam in Croatia was badly damaged by terrorist bombs in 1993. The North Koreans threatened to build a dam across their own Han River and then blow it up, so that the resulting surge would flood Seoul, the southern capital. The dam will be guarded by two divisions of soldiers and will have gun and missile batteries at every vantage point. A security net will be in place so that even the most determined terrorist could not penetrate it.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Continued Flooding It is very clear that this is not a floodcontrol dam. That s just the rhetoric used for propaganda says Phillip Williams, a California based hydrological engineer. There a several major tributaries downstream from the dam capable of contributing to flood conditions. Even if it s operated perfectly, it could only control a small portion of the Yangtze floodplain. The loss of silt deposited on existing levees, will degrade the lower river channels scouring out and undermining the embankments increasing the chances of flooding.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Navigation: The dam has already caused difficulties in navigation including: Lock cycle is 1 hour which is twice the 30 minute planned cycle. Reduction in shipping capacity. Lock problems shut the locks down for 2 weeks. Restrictions on the type and size of boats allowed thru the locks. Greater water surface area in the reservoir is causing much greater fog compared to the already foggy conditions. December 9/2003 Southbound shiplock closes for two-week inspection by Kelly Haggart and Mu Lan The Three Gorges shiplock is closing in one direction on Dec. 10 for an inspection that will disrupt navigation through the dam for two weeks, China News Service (Zhongguo xinwen she) reports.

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Capital Funding Requirements World banks are increasingly nervous about financing the project. Financing is behind schedule and fund raising has been difficult for the second phase of construction. The cost is expected to rise from 28 Billion Dollars to about 90 Billion Dollars. Even if the dam comes in on time and on budget, it would produce electricity at two to three times the cost of it s competition. Continued financing of the dam is a drain on the resources of the Chinese economy As China prepares to raise funds on the domestic stock market to complete the Three Gorges dam, it is jumping through hoops to make an uneconomic project look good. But investors should be very wary of involvement in a venture that requires constant government protection and coddling, and lacks inherent value and economic viability. "Potential investors should realize they would not be investing in a financially healthy enterprise, but in a political sacred cow," says Patricia Adams, an economist and executive director of Probe International (which publishes Three Gorges Probe). May 9/2003

The Problem (Opposing Perspectives) Ego The Three Gorges project is not a hydro-electric engineering project. It is a political project exhibiting all the characteristics of a centrally controlled socialist economic system says Dai Qing Political support at the top of the Chinese government seems to be eroding. The new premier has never publicly endorsed the dam and seems to be distancing himself from it.

China s New Great Wall By Daniel Fisher