China's controversial Three Gorges Dam nears finish


NFPA 70E Training

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$199
Coupon Price:
$149
Reserve Your Seat Today
China's Three Gorges dam draws a step nearer to completion with the pouring of the last concrete on Saturday, but debate rages over the environmental and social consequences of the world's largest hydropower project.

The dam, where workers are still toiling on the 2,309-meter (7,400-ft) long expanse of concrete spanning the Yangtze River, will generate 18 gigawatts of hydropower when it is complete and, it is hoped, tame floods on the notorious waterway.

But the $25 billion project is as much a symbol of China's own power as anything else.

The broad streets and new towers of Yichang, the city of 4 million that is the gateway to the project, attest to the investment poured in since the dam was approved.

But some residents are also eyeing critics' warnings of environmental damage they say in the long run will outweigh the benefits.

"We hear there could be problems related to geology and ecology, but it won't really be clear until the future what those problems are," said a resident surnamed Xie, holding his baby son as he headed out to buy steamed buns for breakfast.

Environmentalists say the water quality in the river has already deteriorated, fish species are declining and silt trapped behind the dam is causing erosion -- even as far away as the estuary in coastal Shanghai.

They warn the dam's reservoir, which will reach a depth of 156 meters (515 feet) by October, will turn into a cesspool of raw sewage and industrial chemicals backing onto Chongqing, the metropolis of 30 million upstream from Yichang.

For the more than 1 million residents already flooded out of their homes, the dam's consequences are all too real.

"Resettlement will determine whether the Three Gorges project is a successful one or not," Li Yongan, president of the Three Gorges Project Development Corporation, told reporters. "If they are dissatisfied, people can report to the local government."

But petitioners say it is the local governments that are the problem, pocketing some of the 25 billion yuan ($3.1 billion) Li says has been spent on resettlement.

The government said this week it will provide funds to support resettled migrants for the next 20 years, but critics say no amount of money can replace the whole cities and archaeological treasures submerged by the waters.

"They had their communities, their relatives, their ways of life and their skills," Dai Qing, an activist who has lobbied against the project, told Reuters.

"A lot of migrants still haven't adapted to their new lives."

Another 300,000, about 80,000 of them this year, are still to be moved before the reservoir rises to its full level by 2009.

The effects of the sheer weight of the 600 km (375 mile) lake are also not understood, with some geologists saying it could make the area more prone to landslides and earthquakes.

The list of concerns about the project have led critics such as Dai to argue that it is political folly, pushed forward to prove a point about China's prowess despite the human and environmental costs.

"They had to realize this project to say 'this is something you foreigners couldn't do, but us Chinese could do it, our socialist system could do it'," she said.

Cao Guangjing, vice-president of the Three Gorges building company, said he had complete confidence in the dam.

"The Three Gorges proves China can build anything well," he told reporters. "I personally have never had any doubts. I believe in it 100 percent."

Related News

Ontario Poised to Miss 2030 Emissions Target

Ontario Poised to Miss 2030 Emissions Target highlights how rising greenhouse gas emissions from electricity…
View more

Global CO2 emissions 'flatlined' in 2019, says IEA

2019 Global CO2 Emissions stayed flat, IEA reports, as renewable energy growth, wind and solar…
View more

Cheap material converts heat to electricity

Polycrystalline Tin Selenide Thermoelectrics enable waste heat recovery with ZT 3.1, matching single crystals while…
View more

Frustration Mounts as Houston's Power Outage Extends

Houston Power Outage Heatwave intensifies a prolonged blackout, straining the grid and infrastructure resilience; emergency…
View more

Chief Scientist: we need to transform our world into a sustainable ‘electric planet’

Hydrogen Energy Transition advances renewable energy integration via electrolysis, carbon capture and storage, and gas…
View more

Hydro One announces pandemic relief fund for Hydro One customers

Hydro One Pandemic Relief Fund offers COVID-19 financial assistance, payment flexibility, and Winter Relief to…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified