CHINA TO BUILD PANAMA CANAL BYPASS THROUGH NICARAGUA
One of the most extraordinary
stories of the past decade largely overlooked by the U.S. media is how CENTRAL
and LATIN AMERICA have quietly escaped U.S. control since 9-11, as Washington
focused on its Global War on Terror.GWOT diverted Washington attention long
enough that progressive governments established themselves throughout the
southern Western hemisphere, from VENEZUELA through BRAZIL, PARAGUAY and BOLIVIA,
which were far less inclined than previous administrations to listen to advice
from their giant “el Norte” neighbor.
A crucial element in this process
has been CENTRAL and LATIN AMERICA expanding their trading opportunities with states
frowned upon by Washington, from IRAN to CHINA.
Now, in the latest sign that
Washington’s sway over the region is diminishing still further, NICARAGUA has
announced that it will soon begin construction of a canal to compete directly
with the Panama Canal further south, to be financed by – CHINA.
As with the Three Gorges Dam,
Beijing is not thinking small, as the proposed canal could take 11 years to
build, cost $40 billion and require digging roughly 130 miles of channel. The
Panama Canal, in contrast, is 48 miles long. The ruling Sandinista National
Liberation Front, which has 63 of the 92 Parliamentary seats, has introduced
legislation to award the project to HK NICARAGUA Canal Development Investment
Co. Ltd. It is an extraordinary proposal for CENTRAL AMERICA’S poorest nation,
which does not even yet have a highway connecting its Atlantic and Pacific
coasts. NICARAGUAN President Daniel Ortega hopes to gain final approval in due
course.
Planning for the project began in
July 2012, when the NICARAGUAN government announced the approval of a law for
the construction of the "Great Inter-Oceanic NICARAGUA Waterway Canal,"
passing legislation that authorized the government to create a company whose
state share would be 51 percent, while the remaining 49 percent would be
acquired by a strategic partner. Daniel Ortega presidential adviser Paul
Osquit, said that it was a project intended to send "a clear signal to the
countries of the world" interested in investing in the mega project, which
included VENEZUELA, BRAZIL, CHINA, JAPAN, SOUTH KOREA and RUSSIA.
NOTICE THAT THE U.S. IS POINTEDLY NOT ON THE LIST.
It will not be an insignificant
undertaking, as the canal’s proposed locks will require 1.7 billion gallons of
water per day, given that the channel will be 200 feet deep in places.
Furthermore, NICARAGUA'S canal would
have to be more than three times longer than the Panama Canal. A major
advantage of the route however is that the massive Lake NICARAGUA is separated
from the Pacific only by a thin strip of land; accordingly, large oceangoing
freighters could travel about 50 miles on Lake NICARAGUA'S waters before going
through a pair of locks, and into a waterway dug across the waist of the
country to the Atlantic coast lowlands.
NICARAGUAN advocates say that the
channel is needed, arguing that inter-oceanic maritime freight traffic demand
will outstrip the capacity of even the expanded PANAMA Canal by more than 300
percent within 123 years, and the canal’s construction create 40,000
construction jobs. Better yet, is could double the per-capita GDP.
FACTS AND FIGURES
The PANAMA Canal is currently
restricted to tankers of up to 65,000 tons, known as “Panamax.” Passage
restrictions now frequently produce lengthy queues of up to 100 merchantmen
outside the canal's Atlantic and Pacific entrances waiting to make the
nine-hour passage. Since 1995 the volume of container shipping has tripled and
since 2001 risen more than 50 percent. Maritime analysts now estimate that
containerized cargo accounts for over 70 percent of international maritime
trade, producing in 2006 almost 346,000 container shipments daily, a figure
estimated by 2014 to exceed 600,000. About two-thirds of the cargo transiting
the channel is headed to or from the U.S., with CHINA PANAMA Canal's
second-largest user.
Since 2007 the waterway has been
undergoing a major $5.25 billion expansion, with construction of a third lane
of locks to augment the current two sets, that will double the capacity of the
Panama Canal to handle 600 million tons annually, with completion scheduled for
2013.
As for the new channel and its ASIAN
constructors, the reality is that the U.S. retains an overwhelming
preponderance of regional military and naval power in the region and asserts
its ability and right to intervene if it feels its interests are threatened, as
emphasized in 1989, when Washington sent 27,000 troops into PANAMA to arrest
president General Manuel Noriega after two U.S. grand juries indicted him for
racketeering, drug trafficking and money-laundering. Last but hardly least,
U.S. warships have retained their historic right of precedence of passage in
time of war. In 2008 Washington re-established its Fourth Fleet, traditionally
responsible for Central and LATIN AMERICAN waters, which had been moribund
since 1950.
NICARAGUA WILL GRANT THE CHINESE COMPANY A CONCESSION FOR
100 YEARS
What’s in it for Hong Kong based HK NICARAGUA
Canal Development Investment Co. Ltd.?
Nicaragua intends to grant the CHINESE
company a concession for 100 years.
Not everyone in Managua is happy
with the project. Opposition congressman Luis Callejas told reporters, "I
do not understand what the rush is. It's such a sensitive topic that the
population should be consulted."
How Washington will react to the new
canal remains to be seen, but for the penny-pinching maritime shipping, shaving
100s of miles off transit routes will undoubtedly been seen as a godsend.
And who knows, if the U.S. begins
LNG shipments from its East Coast to ASIAN markets, some U.S. energy firms may
come to embrace it as well. And if there’s trouble well, there’s always the
Fourth Fleet.
By John C.K. Daly via Oilprice.com
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