[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

DAM-L LS: Big Projects Targeted for Review (fwd)



----- Forwarded message from owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net -----

From owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net  Tue Oct 31 21:44:24 2000
Return-Path: <owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net>
Received: from DaVinci.NetVista.net (mjdomo@mail.netvista.net [206.170.46.10])
	by lox.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca (8.8.7/8.8.8) with ESMTP id VAA05094
	for <dianne@sandelman.ottawa.on.ca>; Tue, 31 Oct 2000 21:44:23 -0500 (EST)
From: owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net
Received: [(from mjdomo@localhost)
	by DaVinci.NetVista.net (8.10.0/8.8.8) id eA12TFs02991
	for irn-three-gorges-list; Tue, 31 Oct 2000 18:29:15 -0800 (PST)
	(envelope-from owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net)]
Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 18:29:15 -0800 (PST)
Message-Id: <200011010229.eA12TFs02991@DaVinci.NetVista.net>
subject: LS: Big Projects Targeted for Review
Sender: owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net
Precedence: bulk

Engineering News Record
http://www.enr.com/news/enrpwr37.asp

Big Projects Targeted for Review (9/25/2000 issue)

                              By John J. Kosowatz in Beijing, with 
Debra K. Rubin

                              International dambuilders were stunned 
in 1997 by the
                              World Bank's brokering of a worldwide $10-million
                              effort to provide the first "holistic" 
review of the
                              megaprojects. Now, they are bracing for 
release of a
                              report that could rewrite planning and, more
                              importantly, lending criteria for large 
international dam
                              projects.

                                   Over 300 members of the International
                              Commission on Large Dams (ICOLD) met last week
                              in Beijing, China, to formulate a 
strategy to smooth
                              acceptance of large dams, at least 50 
meters high. A
                              succession of speakers referred to the 
"critical times"
                              now facing dambuilders.

IMPACTS. Their focus was on the World Commission on Dams (WCD), whose 
report on costs and benefits could redefine methods and practices for 
moving large dams into actual construction. The report, to be 
released in November,  will emphasize socioeconomic and environmental 
consequences of large projects-defined not only by governmental 
planning agencies, but also by citizen and other activist groups not 
traditionally included in planning efforts.

"We will be saying that social and economic impacts are undeniable," 
WCD Commissioner Judy Henderson told ICOLD members. "Indeed, many are 
now regarded as unacceptable. But we also say they are not 
necessarily inevitable. Given today's knowledge and experience, many 
are avoidable."

Topics of particular concern for the industry are resettlement and 
compensation for people directly affected by large projects and 
environmental impacts upstream and downstream. Many large dams being 
built in developing countries have been harshly criticized for 
ignoring or paying scant attention to such issues.

"Our concern is that criteria will be so strict so as to prohibit 
developing nations from obtaining financing," said ICOLD President 
Kaare Høeg, of the Norwegian Geotechnical Institute. That could 
severely impact many of the world's planned large dams, particularly 
in developing nations. China, Indonesia and Thailand have received 
almost 20% of all global aid for hydroelectric projects over the past 
20 years, according to London-based WDC India has 18 projects under 
construction and another 20 in planning stages.

The issue has forced Høeg to adjust ICOLD's agenda over the past year 
to ensure that WCD commissioners and staff are aware of industry best 
practices and standards. ICOLD members worry over what they perceive 
as an anti-dam bias among WCD staff. Høeg's emphasis in actively 
disseminating the organization's papers was meant to counter that 
bias. "Ecological balance is a relative term, not an absolute," he 
noted.

Henderson says WCD drew heavily on ICOLD research. Its positions on 
the environment and socioeconomic impact are progressive and 
"frankly, go further than what we can recommend," she says. Henderson 
also touched on overruns "associated with downstream impacts that are 
often significant...and often unanticipated and thus not compensated 
for." And compliance with resettlement policies often is not carried 
out.

RALLYING CRY. Resettlement has been a key issue for opponents of 
China's $24-billion Three Gorges Dam, the world's largest 
construction project. Guo Shuyan, deputy director of the State 
Council's Three Gorges Dam Project Construction Committee, said 1.1 
million people will be resettled by the time the project is finished 
in 2009, at a total cost of $22 billion. That includes funds to build 
new housing and infrastructure in relocation areas.

About 125,000 people will be moved out of the area altogether because 
of government policy prohibiting development of steep, unfertile 
slopes around the Three Gorges reservoir. Chinese designers say Three 
Gorges will efficiently pass silt and sediment from the Yangtze River 
through a series of outlets at the 90-m elevation of the 181-m-high 
dam. But erosion of reservoir slopes could increase the sediment load 
enough to cause problems. "Moving 1.1 million people is a most 
troublesome task," said Lu You Mei, Three Gorges Development Corp. 
president. "It is more difficult to remove people than to build Three 
Gorges Dam itself."

DELAYS? Chinese contractors continue to keep to their aggressive 
schedule, placing a record-shattering 553,500 cu m  of concrete in 
one month for the dam's spillway, intakes and powerhouse. But a fatal 
accident Sept. 3, the first reported on the project, could affect 
some work.

Three Gorges Vice President Wang Jiazhou says an investigation by 
Chinese authorities continues into the accident that killed three 
workers and injured 30. The accident occurred when workers repairing 
a tower-belt crane purchased from Elmhurst, Ill.-based Rotec 
Industries dropped some parts from a conveyor. The pieces fell 60 ft, 
hitting the workers below.

Rotec Chairman Robert F. Oury terms the accident "devastating," but 
declines to elaborate on possible causes while the investigation 
continues. He notes, however, that the crane "was under the control" 
of Chinese concrete subcontractor Gezhouba. Oury told ENR that the 
accident has shut down all six tower-belt cranes at the site, and he 
does not know when they would be allowed to restart. He notes they 
had been operating incident-free for the last 14 months.

KEEP COOL. Wang reported that two of the project's most perplexing 
problems have been solved. A strict quality control program to 
consistently produce concrete at a constant 7°C is  working. 
Aggregate in each of the project's nine batch plants is cooled with 
minus 5°C air, and then mixed with ice. A high-speed system of cranes 
and conveyors delivers the mix quickly, and cooling pipes installed 
in monolithic blocks as large as 1,000 cu m keep heat down during 
curing.

At the shiplock, designers and contractors worried over the stability 
of the locks' high slopes. Side high wall slopes have a maximum 
height of 170 m, excavated from hard rock. The largest locks in the 
world, the five-step system has a total length of 1,607 m. A 
60-m-wide rock ledge separates the downstream from upstream channel. 
Walls are being lined with thin concrete, so engineers were concerned 
about stability in excavated bedrock. Wang says the contractor 
installed  prestressed tendons and high-strength rock bolts to 
stabilize the area.

LOOKING AHEAD. The concrete-gravity Three Gorges Dam will eventually 
stretch 2,309 m to impound the Yangtze and create a long, thin 
reservoir that can store 39.3 billion cu m of water. The project's 
size and cost makes it a lightning rod as China pursues an ambitious 
plan to build 120 large dams over the next 20 years.

Despite ICOLD's apprehension over the future of large dams, Høeg and 
others think they can move forward. He says the commission has 
already called for more comprehensive planning and participation by 
new constituencies. But neither ICOLD guidelines nor WDC 
recommendations are enforceable, and individual governments may 
choose to ignore them.

WDC's influence with lending agencies could be a key factor. "You've 
got to get the whole package right in terms of social and 
environmental factors" said Henderson. "You can take this as a threat 
to the way things have been done or as an opportunity to move 
forward."

----- End of forwarded message from owner-irn-three-gorges@netvista.net -----