Recommendable! This is huge!
In honor of Thomas Paine and other Founders & Immigrants. In memory of my daddy Horst Bingel and my mom Irma Bingel
Showing posts with label hydro power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hydro power. Show all posts
Monday, September 08, 2025
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
China's gigantic Yarlung Tsangpo River Dam will cost $167 billion and will be the world's largest hydropower dam
How much regard for nature does an unelected communist dictator have?
Communist planners love mega projects!
"The work on the Yarlung Tsangpo River is slated to be the world’s most expensive infrastructure project—$167 billion. It could generate triple the output of the planet’s largest hydroelectric facility, China’s Three Gorges Dam, which can power around 40 million homes. The project will plow money into the country’s struggling economy but has neighbors and environmentalists concerned."
"China has begun the construction of a giant hydropower project at the earthquake-prone edge of the Tibetan plateau, a spectacular engineering feat that is central to Beijing’s enduring mission to become self-sufficient in critical areas such as energy. ..."
"Made up of five cascade hydropower stations with the capacity to produce 300 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity annually, equal to the amount of electricity consumed by Britain last year, the dam will be located in the lower reaches of the Yarlung Zangbo. A section of the river tumbles 2,000 metres (6,561 feet) in a span of 50km (31 miles), offering huge hydropower potential.
India and Bangladesh have already raised concerns about its possible impact on the millions of people downstream, while NGOs warned of the risk to one of the richest and most diverse environments on the plateau. ..."
Friday, September 27, 2024
Uganda commissions 600MW Karuma hydropower plant on the Nile river with the collaboration of China
Good news! More power to the people!
Friday, January 05, 2024
India vs China in Nepal: Hydro Power Pact Signed During Jaishankar's Visit with Palki Sharma
Recommendable! Good news! Nepal has a huge potential for hydro power generation.
Sunday, March 21, 2021
China’s problematic solution to its water-security woes
Recommendable! Very serious stuff! Wars have been fought over water! China, a giant on clay feet/Achilles heel? What about desalination?
"Beijing has long understood that China has a water-security problem that could pose an existential threat. ... Former premier Wen Jiabao observed that water shortages threaten ‘the very survival of the Chinese nation’.
China has 20% of the world’s population but only 7% of its fresh water. And 80% of China’s water is in the south, whereas half of its population and two-thirds of its farmland are in the north. While total water usage in China increased by only 35% between 1980 and 2010, water usage in households increased elevenfold and in industrial sectors, threefold. But per capita available water in China amounts to only a quarter of the world average. ...
A three-year survey of its river system completed by Beijing in 2013 indicated that the number of rivers in China had decreased by 28,000 from previous estimates. The flow of the Yellow River, which provides water to a significant proportion of China’s population, is a tenth of what it was 80 years ago. In addition, groundwater aquifers, critically important to northern parts of China, are being depleted at a rate of 1 to 3 metres a year. A 2015 study of the country’s groundwater found that 80% was contaminated by toxic metals and other pollutants, rendering supply unfit for human consumption. ...
Given this context, Beijing’s announcement late last year that it was moving ahead with plans to construct the world’s largest hydropower dam at Motuo on the Yarlung Tsangpo river ...
China controls the sources of 10 major rivers that flow through 11 countries and supply 1.6 billion people with water. ... "
A three-year survey of its river system completed by Beijing in 2013 indicated that the number of rivers in China had decreased by 28,000 from previous estimates. The flow of the Yellow River, which provides water to a significant proportion of China’s population, is a tenth of what it was 80 years ago. In addition, groundwater aquifers, critically important to northern parts of China, are being depleted at a rate of 1 to 3 metres a year. A 2015 study of the country’s groundwater found that 80% was contaminated by toxic metals and other pollutants, rendering supply unfit for human consumption. ...
Given this context, Beijing’s announcement late last year that it was moving ahead with plans to construct the world’s largest hydropower dam at Motuo on the Yarlung Tsangpo river ...
The new dam, one of at least eleven to be constructed along the Yarlung Tsangpo, ... When complete, it will generate up to 60 gigawatts of electricity. Nevertheless, China’s decision to proceed with the project now is curious for two reasons.
First, analysts see such projects as unfeasible given the prohibitive costs associated with dam-building in the region and with the transmission network that would be required to get the electricity to distant population centres.
Second, existing installed hydropower already far outstrips demand in China and Southeast Asia. ...Beijing’s decision to proceed with the dam makes more sense in light of the likelihood of its being integrated into China’s South–North Water Transfer Project. This project is designed to resolve the water shortage problem in China’s north by moving water through 1,500-kilometre-long canals.
The completed eastern and middle routes of the transfer project can transfer 20.9 billion cubic metres of water each year. In 2018, Beijing started exploring options for the controversial western route of this project. This may result in tens of millions of cubic metres of water being diverted from the Yarlung Tsangpo and other transnational river systems in Tibet to the Yellow River. ...The consequences of the new dam for downstream countries like India and Bangladesh could prove catastrophic. The Yarlung Tsangpo is a transnational river system that becomes the Brahmaputra River in India, which provides 30% of the country’s water. The project could reduce water flows to India by 60%.
The environmental impacts in Tibet and downstream will be devastating. ... could devastate the fragile ecosystem of the Tibetan plateau, and would withhold the river’s sediments from the fertile floodplains of Assam in north-east India, and Bangladesh.’ ...China controls the sources of 10 major rivers that flow through 11 countries and supply 1.6 billion people with water. ... "
Sunday, March 08, 2020
Turning ocean water into watts
Seems to be a similarly foolish idea like wind turbines/mills! Like wind mills, not very reliable and most likely not very environmentally friendly at all! At what point would this form of power generation affect the currents, temperature, wild life etc. of our oceans?
"The sea is an unforgiving environment. It is corrosive, fouling, energetic and forceful ... In the winter of 1988, for example, a fierce storm in Toftestallen, Norway, slammed a wave-power plant that had been installed barely three years earlier. The unhinged tower collapsed and the station had to be rebuilt, only to be destroyed again by accident during an attempted improvement three years later. In 2009, meanwhile, a dozen underwater turbine blades were wrecked by strong tides in the Bay of Fundy, Canada, less than a month after they had been plumbed in"
Turning water into watts – Physics World: The oceans seem like an obvious source of renewable energy, but there are huge technical and financial hurdles to harnessing their vast power. Stephen Ornes investigates
"The sea is an unforgiving environment. It is corrosive, fouling, energetic and forceful ... In the winter of 1988, for example, a fierce storm in Toftestallen, Norway, slammed a wave-power plant that had been installed barely three years earlier. The unhinged tower collapsed and the station had to be rebuilt, only to be destroyed again by accident during an attempted improvement three years later. In 2009, meanwhile, a dozen underwater turbine blades were wrecked by strong tides in the Bay of Fundy, Canada, less than a month after they had been plumbed in"
Turning water into watts – Physics World: The oceans seem like an obvious source of renewable energy, but there are huge technical and financial hurdles to harnessing their vast power. Stephen Ornes investigates
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