China's Enormous Three Gorges Dam Could End Up Being A Huge Mistake
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But their prayers have not been answered.
Six years later, the government says a further 100,000 people may be displaced over the next few years, including 20,000 this year alone, because of increasing landslide risks in the area around the dam, Reuters reports.
The Three Gorges Project is located at Sāndòupíng in the Xilingxia gorge, one of the three gorges on the Yangtze river.
It's one of the biggest hydropower complexes in the world.
Wikimedia Commons/Le Grand Portage/Rehman
(Source: The New York Times)
While official estimates put the cost of production at $23 billion, international experts believe it cost more than double that.
The project took more than a decade to complete.
Getty Images/China Photos
(Source: the BBC)
It serves a purpose, however — The dam generates more than 18,000 MW of power a year.
Getty Images/China Photos
(Source: Scientific American)
Additionally, it's intended to stop the frequent flooding in the region.
The project also increased the amount of cargo transported across the river to 50 million tons, triple the maximum annual amount prior to the dam's construction.
But the system has had some major problems from the very get go.
Getty Images/China Photos
(Source: The New York Times)
A further 100,000 will be moved over the next three to five years because of landslides and bank collapses.
The number of landslides and other natural disasters has increased by 70 percent since the reservoir filled up in 2010.
Some say it played a role in the devastating 2008 Sichuan earthquake, which killed 87,000 people, though the government denies this.
1,300 archaeological sites have also been submerged.
The dam may have exacerbated China's 2011 drought.
Flickr/Euclid vanderKroew
(Source: Nature)
The drought negated most of the dam's plus points: ships were stranded and central and eastern China faced a power shortage.
Environmentalists say the reservoir is accumulating silt and waste from cities and industries.
Getty Images/China Photos
(Source: PBS)
The government finally acknowledged the problems in 2011, five years after Three Gorges was built.
Wikimedia Commons
But despite this late admission, the plan was always contentious. A third of Chinese MPs voted against the plan or abstained.
(Source: the BBC)
But China still wants to build more dams.
Getty Images/China Photos
Other plans include possibly building dams along the Nu River and the upper Mekong, which would be fatal to the area's fragile ecosystems and endangered species, Foreign Policy reports.
(Source: Nature)
China isn't the only one with water problems.
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