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Nicaragua Canal

The Nicaragua Canal (Spanish: Canal de Nicaragua), formally the Nicaraguan Canal and Development Project (also referred to as the Nicaragua Grand Canal, or the Grand Interoceanic Canal) was a proposed shipping route through Nicaragua to connect the Caribbean Sea (and therefore the Atlantic Ocean) with the Pacific Ocean. Scientists were concerned about the project's environmental impact, as Lake Nicaragua is Central America's key freshwater reservoir[4] while the project's viability was questioned by shipping experts and engineers.[5]

Nicaragua Canal
Nicaragua Canal Project (2014) (blue line). Stars indicate the proposed Brito and Camilo Locks. The red line is the border between Nicaragua (above) and Costa Rica (below).
Specifications
Length270 km (170 miles)
StatusAbandoned[1][2][3]
History
Original ownerHK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment
Date of act2013
Geography
Start pointPunta Brito
End pointBluefields

Construction of a canal using the San Juan River as an access route to Lake Nicaragua was first proposed in the early colonial era. After the United States purchased the French interests in the Panama Canal in the early 20th century, it decided not to build in Nicaragua, but it secured rights and conducted studies for such a canal as a supplement.[6]

In June 2013, Nicaragua's National Assembly approved a bill to grant a 50-year concession to finance and manage the project to the HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group (HKND) headed by Wang Jing, a Chinese businessman.[7][8][9][10][11][12] The concession could have been extended for another 50 years once the waterway was operational.[13]

In 2015, media reports suggested the project would be delayed and possibly cancelled because Wang's personal wealth declined greatly as a result of the 2015–16 Chinese stock market crash.[5][14] "Major works" such as dredging were to take place after the finishing of a Pacific Ocean wharf, whose construction was planned to start in late 2016.[5] The Nicaraguan government failed to present reliable information about whether or not the project could be financed, thus casting doubt over whether it would be completed.[15][16][17][18] The HKND Group stated that financing would come from debt and equity sales and a potential initial public offering (IPO).[5]

By May 2017, no concrete action had been taken toward constructing the canal and further doubts were expressed about its financing.[19] In February 2018, analysts widely viewed the project as defunct,[1][3][20] though the head of the project insisted work was on-going[1] and HKND, which closed its offices in April 2018,[21] retained the legal rights to the concession for the canal and side projects.[22]

History edit

 
The various routes proposed over the centuries, with the Panama Canal. The proposed HKND canal would have followed the red route.

Until the beginning of the 20th century, before the opening of the Panama Canal, Nicaragua used to be the main overland trade route and hub of transshipment of goods between ocean-going vessels on the Atlantic side and those on the Pacific. In the meantime, the idea of constructing a man-made waterway through Central America has been thought about throughout history. The colonial administration of New Spain had conducted preliminary surveys. The routes suggested usually ran across Nicaragua, Panama, or the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico.

The history of attempts to build a Nicaragua canal connecting the Caribbean Sea and thus the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean goes back at least to 1825 when the Federal Republic of Central America hired surveyors to study a route via Lake Nicaragua, 32.7 metres (107 ft) above sea level. Many other proposals have followed. Despite the operation of the Panama Canal, which opened in 1914, interest in a Nicaragua canal has continued. With emergence of globalization, an increase in commerce and the cost of fuel, and the limitations of the Panama Canal, the concept of a second canal across the American land bridge became more attractive, and in 2006 the president of Nicaragua, Enrique Bolaños, announced an intention to proceed with such a project.[23] Even with the Panama Canal expansion project, which began commercial operation to allow modern New Panamax vessels on 26 June 2016,[24] some ships would be too big for the Panama Canal.[25]

On 26 September 2012, the Nicaraguan Government and the newly formed Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development Group (HKND) signed a memorandum of understanding that committed HKND to financing and building the "Nicaraguan Canal and Development Project".[8][9][26] HKND Group is a private enterprise.[27]

The Nicaraguan government subsequently approved the Master Concession Agreement with HKND on 13 June 2013 thereby granting "the sole rights to the HKND Group to plan, design, construct and thereafter to operate and manage the Nicaragua Grand Canal and other related projects, including ports, a free trade zone, an international airport and other infrastructure development projects."[28] The agreement would have lasted for 50 years and was renewable for another 50 years.[29] HKND would have paid the Government of Nicaragua US$10M annually for 10 years, and thereafter a portion of the revenue starting at 1% and increasing later.[30] Stratfor indicated that after 10 years, ownership shares would periodically be handed over to Nicaragua, so that after 50 years Nicaragua would be the majority shareholder.[31]

The HKND Group performed a preliminary study phase of development to assess the technological and economic feasibility of constructing a canal in Nicaragua, as well as the potential environmental, social, and regional implications of various routes.[26] The canal and other associated projects would be financed by investors throughout the world and would generate jobs for Nicaragua and other Central American countries.[32]

Initial findings of the commercial analysis conducted by HKND Group indicate that the combined effect of growth in east–west trade and in ship sizes could provide a compelling argument for the construction of a second canal, substantially larger than the expanded Panama Canal, across Central America. In the 2020s, growth in global maritime trade is expected to cause congestion and delays in transit through the Panama Canal without a complementary route through the isthmus, and by 2030, the volume of trade that a Nicaragua Canal could serve would have grown by 240%.[33]

On 10 June 2013, The Associated Press reported that the National Assembly's Infrastructure Committee voted nearly unanimously in favor of the project, with four members abstaining.[34] On 13 June, Nicaragua's legislature passed the legislation granting the concession.[35] On 15 June, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and the billionaire chairman of HKND Group, Wang Jing, signed the concession agreement giving HKND Group the rights to construct and manage the canal and associated projects for 50 years.[36] An HKND Group press release read, "HKND Group successfully obtains exclusive right to develop and manage Nicaragua Grand Canal for 100 years."[37] Under the exclusive contract, Wang can skip building the canal (and making any payments to Nicaragua) and instead simply operate lucrative tax-free side projects.[38]

Wang announced at a press briefing in June 2013 that he had successfully attracted global investors to the $40 billion project.[39] In January 2014, Wang and President Ortega issued a statement that the project's construction would begin in December 2014, and that it would be completed in 2019.[40][41]

On 7 July 2014, a 278 kilometres (173 mi) route for the Nicaragua Canal was approved.[42] The route starts from the mouth of the Brito River on the Pacific side, passes through Lake Nicaragua, and ends in the Punta Gorda River on the Caribbean. The proposed canal would be between 230 and 520 metres (750 and 1,710 ft) wide and 27.6 metres (91 ft) deep. The Toronto Star noted that Chinese engineer Dong Yung Song said the canal's design called for the creation of a 400-square-kilometre (150 sq mi) artificial lake.[43] The water to fill the canal's giant locks would come from the artificial lake, not from Lake Nicaragua.

Daniel Ortega whose government approved the agreement within one week in June 2013, reportedly perceived the canal as the second phase of the Nicaraguan Revolution, predicting that it would pull Nicaragua out of poverty and lead to the creation of 250,000 jobs,[44] but HKND said the project would create 50,000 jobs, though about half would come from abroad, mainly China.[45]

The Moscow Times reported in 2014 that Russia was willing to help build the Nicaragua Canal, viewing the project in part as an opportunity to pursue strategic interests in the region.[46] Construction was to begin on 29 December 2014,[47] and officially started a week earlier. However, owing to Nicaragua's volatile climate and seismic activity, feasibility concerns emerged over the project's future.[48] In November 2015, HKND announced that there would be a delay in the construction of locks and excavations until late 2016 in order to fine-tune the design.[49]

The Nicaragua canal project saw business rivalry greatly intensify in late 2014. China Harbor Engineering Company, an experienced construction company, offered to design, construct, and finance a fourth set of locks in Panama, where it opened a regional headquarters. If built to the width of the proposed Nicaragua Canal, it would cut across a far shorter distance, and still cost only $10 billion, according to the firm. Panama is in a better financial situation than Nicaragua to afford taking on this project in that it already has a stream of income from its existing canals.[50]

Alternative motives have been explored and other projects have taken priority against the water transportation venture. Bloomberg reported in 2015 that "conspiracy theories abound" including the project was a land grab by Ortega, an attempt by Ortega to "whip up" support in elections, and part of a Chinese plan to gain influence in the region.[51]

By November 2016, the president of the canal commission, Manual Coronel Kautz said "According to our schedule, we should initiate major works by the end of the year." However, Carlos Fernando Chamorro, editor of the Confidencial newspaper, said "If the People's Republic of China does not step forward, it won't happen. Wang Jing does not have the reputation to push this through. If it is just him, then the chances of this happening are zero. If the PRC steps in, then it is a big possibility."[52]

Following financial difficulties, HKND finally closed its headquarters offices in China in April 2018, leaving no forwarding address or telephone numbers to be reached.[21]

Opposition edit

Protests against the canal's construction occurred shortly after the official ceremony marking its beginning. Farmers feared it could cause their eviction and land expropriation.

The vast land expropriations (2,900 km2 (1,100 sq mi)) under land expropriation Canal Law 840 enacted in 2013 include a concession for carrying out seven sub-projects, among them ports, oil pipelines, free-trade zones, and developing tourist areas that could be realized in any part of the national territory.[53][54] In particular, this law denies any right to appeal against the expropriation decision and provides a derisory level of compensation.[54] It also allows the investor (HKND) to buy and sell its rights over the various sub-projects "in parts", which is a highly profitable enterprise.[54] This has been called a "land grab" and it has prompted protests,[55][56] and some violent confrontations against security forces.[57] Activists noted that the canal contract established that it must be dissolved in 72 months, if the investor has not obtained the money to start the project; that deadline was 14 June 2019, so they assert that the Law 840 must be repealed.[58]

Opposition leader Eliseo Nuñez has called the deal "part of one of the biggest international scams in the world".[30] Legal challenges that the deal violates constitutional rights were rejected by the Supreme Court of Nicaragua and a retrospective rewriting of the Constitution of Nicaragua placed HKND beyond legal challenge.[44] HKND has been granted the right to expropriate land within 5 km (3.1 mi) on each side of the canal and pay only cadastral value, not market value, for property.[44] Wang, however, promised to pay fair market value.[59] The estimates of the number of people who would be displaced range from 29,000[60] to more than 100,000.[44] There are indications of local opposition to intended expropriations.[60] Thus, according to an activist leader, an unrest in Rivas in December 2014, in opposition to the canal, left two protesters dead, although no evidence was ever produced to justify his claim.[61] The CIDH, Nicaragua's Human Rights Commission, has strongly criticized the government for not looking into the project's effect on citizens, amid claims that citizens were not involved in decision-making.[62] The British firm ERM, who carried out the Environmental Impact Assessment, claims it held consultations with around 6,000 people in the communities along its planned route,[63] and estimated that the property of about 30,000 people would be affected.[63] National opinion polls show that support for the project is about 70%.[63]

Reported end to the canal project edit

Investor Wang had financial setbacks unrelated to the Nicaragua project, losing 80% of his net worth during the 2015–16 Chinese stock market turbulence.[64] In March 2017, the Havana Times reported that the public relations agency handling Wang's interests in Nicaragua had been let go, in absence of any developments on the project to report, and Wang had not been in the country in more than two years.[65] In May 2017, the PanAm Post indicated that "no concrete action has been taken to begin the project" and suggested that the project was either "paralyzed, or nonexistent."[19] In September 2017 Agence France-Presse reported that the work had been "pushed back indefinitely," although the government renewed the project's environmental permit in April 2017.[66]

In February 2018, Manuel Coronel Kautz, head of Interoceanic Grand Canal Authority of Nicaragua, told Agence France-Presse work on the canal was still ongoing, but by that point analysts and activists widely viewed the canal project as defunct, with China having shifted its investment focus to Panama,[1][3] the main competitor to a Nicaraguan canal. Following financial difficulties, HKND finally closed its offices in April 2018, leaving no forwarding address or telephone numbers to be reached.[21]

Absent a 60% vote to revoke the legislation,[1] HKND maintains the legal concessions established by the 2013 law, including for other infrastructures projects in Nicaragua, including ports, roads, railway and an airport.[22]

Description edit

 
Lake Nicaragua would have been the center segment of the Nicaragua Canal

The construction company provided a project description for review on open source, dated December 2014.[67] The canal as planned would have been 259.4 kilometres (161.2 mi) and would have three sections. The West Canal runs from Brito on the Pacific Ocean up the Rio Brito valley, crosses the continental divide, and after passing through the Rio Las Lajas valley enters Lake Nicaragua; its length would be 25.9 kilometres (16.1 mi). The Nicaragua Lake section measures 106.8 km (66.4 mi) and runs from 4 km (2.5 mi) south of San Jorge to 8 km (5.0 mi) south of San Miguelito. The Eastern Canal would be the longest section at 126.7 km (78.7 mi) and would be built along the Rio Tule valley through the Caribbean highland to the Rio Punta Gorda valley to meet the Caribbean Sea. A channel would have to be dug in the lake bottom, as it is not deep enough for large vessels to transit the canal.[64]

Both the West Canal and the East Canal would each have one lock with 3 consecutive chambers to raise ships to the level of Lake Nicaragua that has an average water elevation of 31.3 m (103 ft), with a range between 30.2 and 33.0 m (99.1 and 108.3 ft). The western Brito Lock would be 14.5 km (9.0 mi) inland from the Pacific, and the eastern Camilo Lock would be 13.7 km (8.5 mi) inland from the Caribbean Sea. The dimensions of each of the locks' chambers are 520 m (1,706 ft) long, 75 m (246 ft) wide, and 27.6 m (91 ft) threshold depth. As locks generally define the limit on the size of ships that can be handled, the Nicaragua Canal would have allowed passage for larger ships than those that pass through the Panama Canal. For comparison the Panama Canal, after its 2016 expansion, is only 427 m (1,401 ft) long, 55 m (180 ft) wide, and 18.3 m (60 ft) deep.

No water from Lake Nicaragua was planned to be used to flood the locks; water would have come from local rivers and recycling using water-saving basins. The Camilo lock would have been built adjacent to a new dam of the upper Punta Gorda River that creates a reservoir. This Atlanta Reservoir (or Lake Atlanta) would have a surface area of 395 km2 (153 sq mi). West of the Atlanta reservoir, the Rio Agua Zarca would have been dammed to create a second reservoir. This reservoir would have had a surface area of 48.5 km2 (18.7 sq mi) and hold 1,100×10^6 L (290×10^6 US gal). A hydropower facility would be built at the dam and would have generated over 10 megawatts of power to be used for Camilo Lock operations. Both locks would also be connected to the country's power grid and have back-up generator facilities. It was estimated that each lock would have used about 9 megawatts of power.

At each oceanic canal entrance, breakwaters and port facilities would have been constructed. The Pacific port would be named Brito Port and the Caribbean one Aguila Port. Initially these two ports would have helped during construction and later become international ports. Their design capacity was 1.68 million TEU/year and 2.5 million TEU/year, respectively. Existing port facilities at Corinto and Bluefields would have been improved to allow for shipment of material to the entry ports under construction. Fuel storage sites would be placed at the two port sites. Four lighthouses would be constructed at the entrances to the East and West Canals. In addition, the channel entrance on sea would have been be marked on both sides with a large sailing buoy about 3 kilometres (2 mi) offshore and 2 light buoys would mark the passage through Lake Nicaragua.

A free trade zone with commercial facilities as well as tourist hotels and an international airport at Rivas were planned to be built when canal construction was advanced.

Appropriate road improvements were planned. The Pan-American Highway would have crossed the canal via a bridge. Nicaragua Route 25 (Acoyapa-San Carlos) on the eastern side of Lake Nicaragua would have gotten a ferry service. Both ports would get public road connections. HKND plans to construct a private gravel maintenance road on both sides of the canal.

The estimate for the workforce in 2020 was 3,700 people, and 12,700 in 2050 when traffic had increased.

Transit time would have been about 30 hours. It was projected that by 2020 3,576 ships would have transited the canal annually. The transit rate was expected to increase to 4,138 by 2030, and to 5,097 by 2050. For comparison, the Panama Canal handled 12,855 transits in 2009.[68]

Construction edit

No significant construction took place.[69] No "major works" such as dredging were planned to take place until after a Pacific Ocean wharf was built.[5]

The apparent lack of experience of Wang and his HKND in large-scale engineering was cited as a risk.[39][70]

On December 22, 2014, Wang announced construction started in Rivas, Nicaragua. Wang spoke during the starting ceremony of the first works of the Interoceanic Grand Canal in Brito town. Construction of the new waterway would have been by HKND Group—Hong Kong–based HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co Ltd., which is controlled by Wang.[71] According to HKND's announced plans in 2015, the project entailed the canal's development and building, and supporting infrastructure.[72] There would have been four main phases. The preconstruction phase included getting permits, acquiring land and machinery, and finalizing designs and plans. The early construction phase, started in December 2014, lasted through September 2015; it secured access to construction sites, but it did not provide the critical infrastructure nor mobilize the workforce. During the construction phase from September 2015 to March 2020, the canal would have been dug and the locks built along with accompanying infrastructure. The commissioning phase projected from April 2020 to June 2020 included lock testing and lock and tug boat operator training.

HKND described the project as the largest civil earth-moving operation in history. Most of this would have consisted of dry excavation to form the canal with an estimate of 4,019 MCM of rock and soil. There would have been 739 MCM of freshwater dredging (Lake Nicaragua) and 241 MCM of marine dredging. Marine dredging of the oceanic access canal would be required on the Pacific side for 1.7 km (1.1 mi) and on the Caribbean Sea side for 14.4 km (8.9 mi). Disposal of excavation material would have been done along the canal in designated disposal areas typically within 3 km (1.9 mi) of the canal.

Two concrete plants and a steel plant were planned to support the project. While cement would have likely been imported, construction aggregate would have come from local quarries near the two locks.

HKND estimates that about 50,000 people would be employed during the five-year construction, about half of them from Nicaragua, 25% from China, and the remainder from various other countries. 1,400 workers would be in office or administrative positions and the rest in the field. The management offices would be rented or purchased near Rivas. Workers would live in one of nine camps, which besides food and shelter would also provide health care and security. These are “closed” camps — that is, workers cannot leave the camp unless part of an organized activity. The work schedule calls for 12 hour shifts for 7 days a week. Domestic workers work two weeks and get one week off, while foreign workers are 6 weeks on and get 2 weeks off (management) or 22 weeks on, 4 weeks off (blue collar workers).

On 2 September 2015, Pang Wai Kwok (executive VP of HKND Group) was interviewed by Nicaraguan journalist Carlos Solis and said up to 3,000 people might be employed on the canal project within the year. However, the labor force depends on the contract bid's winner and Kwok said anyone in the world is eligible to work on the canal.[73][74]

Financing edit

Project costs were estimated in the region of $40 billion to $50 billion.[28][75][76] Beside private money provided by Wang at the start-up, further influx of financial support was expected from investors. An IPO was reported to be in preparation by the end of 2014.[77] XCMG, a state-owned Chinese construction company would have provided machinery and taken 1.5% to 3% of HKND shares in return.[78]

By the end of 2014, no major investors had been named. There had been speculation that the Chinese government would provide financial backing for the project, but China, as well as Wang, denied this.[30][76] Wang lost nearly 85% of his wealth during the 2015 Chinese stock market crash, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.[79] In addition, Wang has had a string of setbacks for projects around the world since 2014.[80] The economic development potential for the canal project is relatively measurable with Panama; however, the World Bank describes the country of Nicaragua as the second poorest in Latin America and the Caribbean.[81] The World Bank has compiled a data list of projects that the impoverished nation has on record and the majority of the efforts are geared towards infrastructure and agricultural needs, but there is no explicit title project that would support the canal line of effort.[82]

Wang admitted that the project has financial, political, and engineering risks.[39] With the high cost of the project that independently has been estimated to be about $100 billion,[31] it was not fully funded. The project was expected in 2014 to be completed in 2020, but Stratfor, an analyst agency, stated then that was an "unrealistic goal."[31]

While the Nicaraguan National Bank reserves served as collateral on the part of Nicaragua, HKND had no such potential liability.[83]

Impact edit

Environmental edit

Some of the natural habitat of at least 22 endangered species would be destroyed in the construction.[84] Another major environmental concern is the project's impact on Lake Nicaragua, the largest source of freshwater in Nicaragua.[30] An oil spill would have serious and lasting consequences. Other problems include the possibility of dredging bringing up toxic sediments, the disruption of migration patterns of animal species, and the potential to introduce invasive species to the lake.[85] Environmental studies had not been released by HKND when the project officially started in December 2014. The Nicaraguan Academy of Sciences noted that hundreds of thousands of hectares of pristine forests and wetlands would be destroyed and pointed out that the environmental study performed for the canal was not independent.[86]

President Daniel Ortega stated that he is "not concerned about harming the lake because it is already contaminated."[87] Protesters fear that the canal would bring massive environmental destruction to Lake Nicaragua and the Atlantic Autonomous Regions.[88] 400,000 hectares of tropical rain forest and wetlands would be destroyed.[89] It would also encroach upon the habitats of animals such as Baird's tapir, the spider monkey, and the jaguar.[90]

Safety edit

Richard Condit, from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, believes that the project could be used as leverage for forest protection in a country that currently lacks "institutional capacity" to meet conservation needs.[91] A Canadian pilot was the first fatality during the canal project.[92] The pilot was flying alone on the western side of Lake Nicaragua during an aerial survey.

Sustainability edit

The survey site was on the same side as NicarAgua–Dulce, which is the only ecotourism group in Nicaragua that is affiliated with The International Ecotourism Society, and it is located north of the proposed canal site.[93] Falling in line with ecotourism, Nicaragua's Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources has promoted formal workshops at each level of education (primary, secondary, and post-secondary); however, there is no curriculum relevant to the pending canal project.[94] The American-led Foundation for Sustainable Development is another partner that provides training initiatives to Nicaraguans that cannot access formal education. One of FSD's support sites is located at Tola, which is within close proximity of the proposed Brito–Pacific canal opening.[95]

Economic edit

As the original Panama Canal still has capacity for Panamax-sized shipping and Panama has completed its Panama Canal expansion project, adding more capacity and allowing transit for even larger New Panamax size ships, projections for the Nicaragua Canal's traffic may be optimistic.[96][97] While the proposed Nicaragua Canal would be wide enough to accommodate Triple E class mega container ships, which are too wide for the expanded Panama Canal, few ports are able to accommodate these ships at the present time. Further, a coast-to-coast railway line may be built by China in Honduras and could affect use of the Nicaragua Canal.[39][98] Also, North American overland shipping through Pacific ports in Mexico and the United States will compete in the traffic between Asia and the U.S. east coast. The collective effect of the above is that competition may undermine the Nicaragua Canal's economic viability if it were ever built.[31] On the other hand, the combined effect of climate change and poor water-management of the 2016 Panama Canal expansion has resulted in severe bottlenecks which are expected to be exacerbated by future drought conditions. With better water management, and the ability to accommodate dramatically larger vessels, the Nicaragua Canal could supplant other freight options over the next 50 years.

The canal would affect neighboring economies, like Honduras and El Salvador, as they are part of the commercial treaty known as the Northern Triangle of Central America (Triángulo Norte de Centroamérica).[99][100] The GDP of each nation would be influenced by expanded export / import operations and trade cooperation through agencies like the promotion authority in El Salvador.[101]

Social edit

According to the official Environmental Impact Assessment carried out by ERM, the canal would require the relocation of around 30,000 people.[63] However, according to human rights group Amnesty International it would "forcibly displace an estimated 120,000 people, including Rama and Creole communities, from protected indigenous territories on the Caribbean coast." The report claims that communities established in proposed canal area have been visited by foreigners, guarded by Nicaraguan authorities, measuring the lands of the inhabitants, and that legislation passed by the Ortega government "authorizes HKND to expropriate whatever land it wants, while denying displaced families the right to appeal." Amnesty International goes on to say that "...excessive forces and unjust arrests have been performed by Nicaraguan officials".[84] The Nicaraguan government's 2015 report on the canal counters that, while people will be moved from their current villages, "The Nicaraguan government and HKND will guarantee that persons and families on the route of the canal's construction will have living conditions superior to those they currently have."[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Brodhead, Michael J. (January 2012). (PDF). Federal History (4): 111–130. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  • Howard, Brian Clark (20 February 2014). . National Geographic magazine. National Geographic Society. Archived from the original on 1 March 2014.
  • Tsekov, Borislav (6 January 2015). About Nicaragua Canal, geopolitics and south stream pipeline (PDF) (Report). Institute of Modern Politics.

External links edit

  • "Gran Canal Interoceanico de Nicaragua" [[The] Grand Interoceanic Canal of Nicaragua] (in Spanish). Nicaragua: La Voz del Sandinismo.
  • (PDF) (Report). HKND. 5 January 2015. Archived from the original on 10 January 2015.
    via . Archived from the original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved 7 June 2013.

11°30′N 85°00′W / 11.5°N 85.0°W / 11.5; -85.0

nicaragua, canal, request, that, this, article, title, changed, under, discussion, please, move, this, article, until, discussion, closed, spanish, canal, nicaragua, formally, nicaraguan, canal, development, project, also, referred, nicaragua, grand, canal, gr. A request that this article title be changed is under discussion Please do not move this article until the discussion is closed The Nicaragua Canal Spanish Canal de Nicaragua formally the Nicaraguan Canal and Development Project also referred to as the Nicaragua Grand Canal or the Grand Interoceanic Canal was a proposed shipping route through Nicaragua to connect the Caribbean Sea and therefore the Atlantic Ocean with the Pacific Ocean Scientists were concerned about the project s environmental impact as Lake Nicaragua is Central America s key freshwater reservoir 4 while the project s viability was questioned by shipping experts and engineers 5 Nicaragua CanalNicaragua Canal Project 2014 blue line Stars indicate the proposed Brito and Camilo Locks The red line is the border between Nicaragua above and Costa Rica below SpecificationsLength270 km 170 miles StatusAbandoned 1 2 3 HistoryOriginal ownerHK Nicaragua Canal Development InvestmentDate of act2013GeographyStart pointPunta BritoEnd pointBluefields Construction of a canal using the San Juan River as an access route to Lake Nicaragua was first proposed in the early colonial era After the United States purchased the French interests in the Panama Canal in the early 20th century it decided not to build in Nicaragua but it secured rights and conducted studies for such a canal as a supplement 6 In June 2013 Nicaragua s National Assembly approved a bill to grant a 50 year concession to finance and manage the project to the HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group HKND headed by Wang Jing a Chinese businessman 7 8 9 10 11 12 The concession could have been extended for another 50 years once the waterway was operational 13 In 2015 media reports suggested the project would be delayed and possibly cancelled because Wang s personal wealth declined greatly as a result of the 2015 16 Chinese stock market crash 5 14 Major works such as dredging were to take place after the finishing of a Pacific Ocean wharf whose construction was planned to start in late 2016 5 The Nicaraguan government failed to present reliable information about whether or not the project could be financed thus casting doubt over whether it would be completed 15 16 17 18 The HKND Group stated that financing would come from debt and equity sales and a potential initial public offering IPO 5 By May 2017 no concrete action had been taken toward constructing the canal and further doubts were expressed about its financing 19 In February 2018 analysts widely viewed the project as defunct 1 3 20 though the head of the project insisted work was on going 1 and HKND which closed its offices in April 2018 21 retained the legal rights to the concession for the canal and side projects 22 Contents 1 History 1 1 Opposition 1 2 Reported end to the canal project 2 Description 3 Construction 3 1 Financing 4 Impact 4 1 Environmental 4 1 1 Safety 4 1 2 Sustainability 4 2 Economic 4 3 Social 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editMain article History of the Nicaragua Canal nbsp The various routes proposed over the centuries with the Panama Canal The proposed HKND canal would have followed the red route Until the beginning of the 20th century before the opening of the Panama Canal Nicaragua used to be the main overland trade route and hub of transshipment of goods between ocean going vessels on the Atlantic side and those on the Pacific In the meantime the idea of constructing a man made waterway through Central America has been thought about throughout history The colonial administration of New Spain had conducted preliminary surveys The routes suggested usually ran across Nicaragua Panama or the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico The history of attempts to build a Nicaragua canal connecting the Caribbean Sea and thus the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean goes back at least to 1825 when the Federal Republic of Central America hired surveyors to study a route via Lake Nicaragua 32 7 metres 107 ft above sea level Many other proposals have followed Despite the operation of the Panama Canal which opened in 1914 interest in a Nicaragua canal has continued With emergence of globalization an increase in commerce and the cost of fuel and the limitations of the Panama Canal the concept of a second canal across the American land bridge became more attractive and in 2006 the president of Nicaragua Enrique Bolanos announced an intention to proceed with such a project 23 Even with the Panama Canal expansion project which began commercial operation to allow modern New Panamax vessels on 26 June 2016 24 some ships would be too big for the Panama Canal 25 On 26 September 2012 the Nicaraguan Government and the newly formed Hong Kong Nicaragua Canal Development Group HKND signed a memorandum of understanding that committed HKND to financing and building the Nicaraguan Canal and Development Project 8 9 26 HKND Group is a private enterprise 27 The Nicaraguan government subsequently approved the Master Concession Agreement with HKND on 13 June 2013 thereby granting the sole rights to the HKND Group to plan design construct and thereafter to operate and manage the Nicaragua Grand Canal and other related projects including ports a free trade zone an international airport and other infrastructure development projects 28 The agreement would have lasted for 50 years and was renewable for another 50 years 29 HKND would have paid the Government of Nicaragua US 10M annually for 10 years and thereafter a portion of the revenue starting at 1 and increasing later 30 Stratfor indicated that after 10 years ownership shares would periodically be handed over to Nicaragua so that after 50 years Nicaragua would be the majority shareholder 31 The HKND Group performed a preliminary study phase of development to assess the technological and economic feasibility of constructing a canal in Nicaragua as well as the potential environmental social and regional implications of various routes 26 The canal and other associated projects would be financed by investors throughout the world and would generate jobs for Nicaragua and other Central American countries 32 Initial findings of the commercial analysis conducted by HKND Group indicate that the combined effect of growth in east west trade and in ship sizes could provide a compelling argument for the construction of a second canal substantially larger than the expanded Panama Canal across Central America In the 2020s growth in global maritime trade is expected to cause congestion and delays in transit through the Panama Canal without a complementary route through the isthmus and by 2030 the volume of trade that a Nicaragua Canal could serve would have grown by 240 33 On 10 June 2013 The Associated Press reported that the National Assembly s Infrastructure Committee voted nearly unanimously in favor of the project with four members abstaining 34 On 13 June Nicaragua s legislature passed the legislation granting the concession 35 On 15 June Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and the billionaire chairman of HKND Group Wang Jing signed the concession agreement giving HKND Group the rights to construct and manage the canal and associated projects for 50 years 36 An HKND Group press release read HKND Group successfully obtains exclusive right to develop and manage Nicaragua Grand Canal for 100 years 37 Under the exclusive contract Wang can skip building the canal and making any payments to Nicaragua and instead simply operate lucrative tax free side projects 38 Wang announced at a press briefing in June 2013 that he had successfully attracted global investors to the 40 billion project 39 In January 2014 Wang and President Ortega issued a statement that the project s construction would begin in December 2014 and that it would be completed in 2019 40 41 On 7 July 2014 a 278 kilometres 173 mi route for the Nicaragua Canal was approved 42 The route starts from the mouth of the Brito River on the Pacific side passes through Lake Nicaragua and ends in the Punta Gorda River on the Caribbean The proposed canal would be between 230 and 520 metres 750 and 1 710 ft wide and 27 6 metres 91 ft deep The Toronto Star noted that Chinese engineer Dong Yung Song said the canal s design called for the creation of a 400 square kilometre 150 sq mi artificial lake 43 The water to fill the canal s giant locks would come from the artificial lake not from Lake Nicaragua Daniel Ortega whose government approved the agreement within one week in June 2013 reportedly perceived the canal as the second phase of the Nicaraguan Revolution predicting that it would pull Nicaragua out of poverty and lead to the creation of 250 000 jobs 44 but HKND said the project would create 50 000 jobs though about half would come from abroad mainly China 45 The Moscow Times reported in 2014 that Russia was willing to help build the Nicaragua Canal viewing the project in part as an opportunity to pursue strategic interests in the region 46 Construction was to begin on 29 December 2014 47 and officially started a week earlier However owing to Nicaragua s volatile climate and seismic activity feasibility concerns emerged over the project s future 48 In November 2015 HKND announced that there would be a delay in the construction of locks and excavations until late 2016 in order to fine tune the design 49 The Nicaragua canal project saw business rivalry greatly intensify in late 2014 China Harbor Engineering Company an experienced construction company offered to design construct and finance a fourth set of locks in Panama where it opened a regional headquarters If built to the width of the proposed Nicaragua Canal it would cut across a far shorter distance and still cost only 10 billion according to the firm Panama is in a better financial situation than Nicaragua to afford taking on this project in that it already has a stream of income from its existing canals 50 Alternative motives have been explored and other projects have taken priority against the water transportation venture Bloomberg reported in 2015 that conspiracy theories abound including the project was a land grab by Ortega an attempt by Ortega to whip up support in elections and part of a Chinese plan to gain influence in the region 51 By November 2016 the president of the canal commission Manual Coronel Kautz said According to our schedule we should initiate major works by the end of the year However Carlos Fernando Chamorro editor of the Confidencial newspaper said If the People s Republic of China does not step forward it won t happen Wang Jing does not have the reputation to push this through If it is just him then the chances of this happening are zero If the PRC steps in then it is a big possibility 52 Following financial difficulties HKND finally closed its headquarters offices in China in April 2018 leaving no forwarding address or telephone numbers to be reached 21 Opposition edit See also 2014 2018 Nicaraguan protests Protests against the canal s construction occurred shortly after the official ceremony marking its beginning Farmers feared it could cause their eviction and land expropriation The vast land expropriations 2 900 km2 1 100 sq mi under land expropriation Canal Law 840 enacted in 2013 include a concession for carrying out seven sub projects among them ports oil pipelines free trade zones and developing tourist areas that could be realized in any part of the national territory 53 54 In particular this law denies any right to appeal against the expropriation decision and provides a derisory level of compensation 54 It also allows the investor HKND to buy and sell its rights over the various sub projects in parts which is a highly profitable enterprise 54 This has been called a land grab and it has prompted protests 55 56 and some violent confrontations against security forces 57 Activists noted that the canal contract established that it must be dissolved in 72 months if the investor has not obtained the money to start the project that deadline was 14 June 2019 so they assert that the Law 840 must be repealed 58 Opposition leader Eliseo Nunez has called the deal part of one of the biggest international scams in the world 30 Legal challenges that the deal violates constitutional rights were rejected by the Supreme Court of Nicaragua and a retrospective rewriting of the Constitution of Nicaragua placed HKND beyond legal challenge 44 HKND has been granted the right to expropriate land within 5 km 3 1 mi on each side of the canal and pay only cadastral value not market value for property 44 Wang however promised to pay fair market value 59 The estimates of the number of people who would be displaced range from 29 000 60 to more than 100 000 44 There are indications of local opposition to intended expropriations 60 Thus according to an activist leader an unrest in Rivas in December 2014 in opposition to the canal left two protesters dead although no evidence was ever produced to justify his claim 61 The CIDH Nicaragua s Human Rights Commission has strongly criticized the government for not looking into the project s effect on citizens amid claims that citizens were not involved in decision making 62 The British firm ERM who carried out the Environmental Impact Assessment claims it held consultations with around 6 000 people in the communities along its planned route 63 and estimated that the property of about 30 000 people would be affected 63 National opinion polls show that support for the project is about 70 63 Reported end to the canal project edit Investor Wang had financial setbacks unrelated to the Nicaragua project losing 80 of his net worth during the 2015 16 Chinese stock market turbulence 64 In March 2017 the Havana Times reported that the public relations agency handling Wang s interests in Nicaragua had been let go in absence of any developments on the project to report and Wang had not been in the country in more than two years 65 In May 2017 the PanAm Post indicated that no concrete action has been taken to begin the project and suggested that the project was either paralyzed or nonexistent 19 In September 2017 Agence France Presse reported that the work had been pushed back indefinitely although the government renewed the project s environmental permit in April 2017 66 In February 2018 Manuel Coronel Kautz head of Interoceanic Grand Canal Authority of Nicaragua told Agence France Presse work on the canal was still ongoing but by that point analysts and activists widely viewed the canal project as defunct with China having shifted its investment focus to Panama 1 3 the main competitor to a Nicaraguan canal Following financial difficulties HKND finally closed its offices in April 2018 leaving no forwarding address or telephone numbers to be reached 21 Absent a 60 vote to revoke the legislation 1 HKND maintains the legal concessions established by the 2013 law including for other infrastructures projects in Nicaragua including ports roads railway and an airport 22 Description edit nbsp Lake Nicaragua would have been the center segment of the Nicaragua Canal The construction company provided a project description for review on open source dated December 2014 67 The canal as planned would have been 259 4 kilometres 161 2 mi and would have three sections The West Canal runs from Brito on the Pacific Ocean up the Rio Brito valley crosses the continental divide and after passing through the Rio Las Lajas valley enters Lake Nicaragua its length would be 25 9 kilometres 16 1 mi The Nicaragua Lake section measures 106 8 km 66 4 mi and runs from 4 km 2 5 mi south of San Jorge to 8 km 5 0 mi south of San Miguelito The Eastern Canal would be the longest section at 126 7 km 78 7 mi and would be built along the Rio Tule valley through the Caribbean highland to the Rio Punta Gorda valley to meet the Caribbean Sea A channel would have to be dug in the lake bottom as it is not deep enough for large vessels to transit the canal 64 Both the West Canal and the East Canal would each have one lock with 3 consecutive chambers to raise ships to the level of Lake Nicaragua that has an average water elevation of 31 3 m 103 ft with a range between 30 2 and 33 0 m 99 1 and 108 3 ft The western Brito Lock would be 14 5 km 9 0 mi inland from the Pacific and the eastern Camilo Lock would be 13 7 km 8 5 mi inland from the Caribbean Sea The dimensions of each of the locks chambers are 520 m 1 706 ft long 75 m 246 ft wide and 27 6 m 91 ft threshold depth As locks generally define the limit on the size of ships that can be handled the Nicaragua Canal would have allowed passage for larger ships than those that pass through the Panama Canal For comparison the Panama Canal after its 2016 expansion is only 427 m 1 401 ft long 55 m 180 ft wide and 18 3 m 60 ft deep No water from Lake Nicaragua was planned to be used to flood the locks water would have come from local rivers and recycling using water saving basins The Camilo lock would have been built adjacent to a new dam of the upper Punta Gorda River that creates a reservoir This Atlanta Reservoir or Lake Atlanta would have a surface area of 395 km2 153 sq mi West of the Atlanta reservoir the Rio Agua Zarca would have been dammed to create a second reservoir This reservoir would have had a surface area of 48 5 km2 18 7 sq mi and hold 1 100 10 6 L 290 10 6 US gal A hydropower facility would be built at the dam and would have generated over 10 megawatts of power to be used for Camilo Lock operations Both locks would also be connected to the country s power grid and have back up generator facilities It was estimated that each lock would have used about 9 megawatts of power At each oceanic canal entrance breakwaters and port facilities would have been constructed The Pacific port would be named Brito Port and the Caribbean one Aguila Port Initially these two ports would have helped during construction and later become international ports Their design capacity was 1 68 million TEU year and 2 5 million TEU year respectively Existing port facilities at Corinto and Bluefields would have been improved to allow for shipment of material to the entry ports under construction Fuel storage sites would be placed at the two port sites Four lighthouses would be constructed at the entrances to the East and West Canals In addition the channel entrance on sea would have been be marked on both sides with a large sailing buoy about 3 kilometres 2 mi offshore and 2 light buoys would mark the passage through Lake Nicaragua A free trade zone with commercial facilities as well as tourist hotels and an international airport at Rivas were planned to be built when canal construction was advanced Appropriate road improvements were planned The Pan American Highway would have crossed the canal via a bridge Nicaragua Route 25 Acoyapa San Carlos on the eastern side of Lake Nicaragua would have gotten a ferry service Both ports would get public road connections HKND plans to construct a private gravel maintenance road on both sides of the canal The estimate for the workforce in 2020 was 3 700 people and 12 700 in 2050 when traffic had increased Transit time would have been about 30 hours It was projected that by 2020 3 576 ships would have transited the canal annually The transit rate was expected to increase to 4 138 by 2030 and to 5 097 by 2050 For comparison the Panama Canal handled 12 855 transits in 2009 68 Construction editNo significant construction took place 69 No major works such as dredging were planned to take place until after a Pacific Ocean wharf was built 5 The apparent lack of experience of Wang and his HKND in large scale engineering was cited as a risk 39 70 On December 22 2014 Wang announced construction started in Rivas Nicaragua Wang spoke during the starting ceremony of the first works of the Interoceanic Grand Canal in Brito town Construction of the new waterway would have been by HKND Group Hong Kong based HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co Ltd which is controlled by Wang 71 According to HKND s announced plans in 2015 the project entailed the canal s development and building and supporting infrastructure 72 There would have been four main phases The preconstruction phase included getting permits acquiring land and machinery and finalizing designs and plans The early construction phase started in December 2014 lasted through September 2015 it secured access to construction sites but it did not provide the critical infrastructure nor mobilize the workforce During the construction phase from September 2015 to March 2020 the canal would have been dug and the locks built along with accompanying infrastructure The commissioning phase projected from April 2020 to June 2020 included lock testing and lock and tug boat operator training HKND described the project as the largest civil earth moving operation in history Most of this would have consisted of dry excavation to form the canal with an estimate of 4 019 MCM of rock and soil There would have been 739 MCM of freshwater dredging Lake Nicaragua and 241 MCM of marine dredging Marine dredging of the oceanic access canal would be required on the Pacific side for 1 7 km 1 1 mi and on the Caribbean Sea side for 14 4 km 8 9 mi Disposal of excavation material would have been done along the canal in designated disposal areas typically within 3 km 1 9 mi of the canal Two concrete plants and a steel plant were planned to support the project While cement would have likely been imported construction aggregate would have come from local quarries near the two locks HKND estimates that about 50 000 people would be employed during the five year construction about half of them from Nicaragua 25 from China and the remainder from various other countries 1 400 workers would be in office or administrative positions and the rest in the field The management offices would be rented or purchased near Rivas Workers would live in one of nine camps which besides food and shelter would also provide health care and security These are closed camps that is workers cannot leave the camp unless part of an organized activity The work schedule calls for 12 hour shifts for 7 days a week Domestic workers work two weeks and get one week off while foreign workers are 6 weeks on and get 2 weeks off management or 22 weeks on 4 weeks off blue collar workers On 2 September 2015 Pang Wai Kwok executive VP of HKND Group was interviewed by Nicaraguan journalist Carlos Solis and said up to 3 000 people might be employed on the canal project within the year However the labor force depends on the contract bid s winner and Kwok said anyone in the world is eligible to work on the canal 73 74 Financing edit Project costs were estimated in the region of 40 billion to 50 billion 28 75 76 Beside private money provided by Wang at the start up further influx of financial support was expected from investors An IPO was reported to be in preparation by the end of 2014 77 XCMG a state owned Chinese construction company would have provided machinery and taken 1 5 to 3 of HKND shares in return 78 By the end of 2014 no major investors had been named There had been speculation that the Chinese government would provide financial backing for the project but China as well as Wang denied this 30 76 Wang lost nearly 85 of his wealth during the 2015 Chinese stock market crash according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index 79 In addition Wang has had a string of setbacks for projects around the world since 2014 80 The economic development potential for the canal project is relatively measurable with Panama however the World Bank describes the country of Nicaragua as the second poorest in Latin America and the Caribbean 81 The World Bank has compiled a data list of projects that the impoverished nation has on record and the majority of the efforts are geared towards infrastructure and agricultural needs but there is no explicit title project that would support the canal line of effort 82 Wang admitted that the project has financial political and engineering risks 39 With the high cost of the project that independently has been estimated to be about 100 billion 31 it was not fully funded The project was expected in 2014 to be completed in 2020 but Stratfor an analyst agency stated then that was an unrealistic goal 31 While the Nicaraguan National Bank reserves served as collateral on the part of Nicaragua HKND had no such potential liability 83 Impact editEnvironmental edit Some of the natural habitat of at least 22 endangered species would be destroyed in the construction 84 Another major environmental concern is the project s impact on Lake Nicaragua the largest source of freshwater in Nicaragua 30 An oil spill would have serious and lasting consequences Other problems include the possibility of dredging bringing up toxic sediments the disruption of migration patterns of animal species and the potential to introduce invasive species to the lake 85 Environmental studies had not been released by HKND when the project officially started in December 2014 The Nicaraguan Academy of Sciences noted that hundreds of thousands of hectares of pristine forests and wetlands would be destroyed and pointed out that the environmental study performed for the canal was not independent 86 President Daniel Ortega stated that he is not concerned about harming the lake because it is already contaminated 87 Protesters fear that the canal would bring massive environmental destruction to Lake Nicaragua and the Atlantic Autonomous Regions 88 400 000 hectares of tropical rain forest and wetlands would be destroyed 89 It would also encroach upon the habitats of animals such as Baird s tapir the spider monkey and the jaguar 90 Safety edit Richard Condit from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute believes that the project could be used as leverage for forest protection in a country that currently lacks institutional capacity to meet conservation needs 91 A Canadian pilot was the first fatality during the canal project 92 The pilot was flying alone on the western side of Lake Nicaragua during an aerial survey Sustainability edit The survey site was on the same side as NicarAgua Dulce which is the only ecotourism group in Nicaragua that is affiliated with The International Ecotourism Society and it is located north of the proposed canal site 93 Falling in line with ecotourism Nicaragua s Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources has promoted formal workshops at each level of education primary secondary and post secondary however there is no curriculum relevant to the pending canal project 94 The American led Foundation for Sustainable Development is another partner that provides training initiatives to Nicaraguans that cannot access formal education One of FSD s support sites is located at Tola which is within close proximity of the proposed Brito Pacific canal opening 95 Economic edit As the original Panama Canal still has capacity for Panamax sized shipping and Panama has completed its Panama Canal expansion project adding more capacity and allowing transit for even larger New Panamax size ships projections for the Nicaragua Canal s traffic may be optimistic 96 97 While the proposed Nicaragua Canal would be wide enough to accommodate Triple E class mega container ships which are too wide for the expanded Panama Canal few ports are able to accommodate these ships at the present time Further a coast to coast railway line may be built by China in Honduras and could affect use of the Nicaragua Canal 39 98 Also North American overland shipping through Pacific ports in Mexico and the United States will compete in the traffic between Asia and the U S east coast The collective effect of the above is that competition may undermine the Nicaragua Canal s economic viability if it were ever built 31 On the other hand the combined effect of climate change and poor water management of the 2016 Panama Canal expansion has resulted in severe bottlenecks which are expected to be exacerbated by future drought conditions With better water management and the ability to accommodate dramatically larger vessels the Nicaragua Canal could supplant other freight options over the next 50 years The canal would affect neighboring economies like Honduras and El Salvador as they are part of the commercial treaty known as the Northern Triangle of Central America Triangulo Norte de Centroamerica 99 100 The GDP of each nation would be influenced by expanded export import operations and trade cooperation through agencies like the promotion authority in El Salvador 101 Social edit According to the official Environmental Impact Assessment carried out by ERM the canal would require the relocation of around 30 000 people 63 However according to human rights group Amnesty International it would forcibly displace an estimated 120 000 people including Rama and Creole communities from protected indigenous territories on the Caribbean coast The report claims that communities established in proposed canal area have been visited by foreigners guarded by Nicaraguan authorities measuring the lands of the inhabitants and that legislation passed by the Ortega government authorizes HKND to expropriate whatever land it wants while denying displaced families the right to appeal Amnesty International goes on to say that excessive forces and unjust arrests have been performed by Nicaraguan officials 84 The Nicaraguan government s 2015 report on the canal counters that while people will be moved from their current villages The Nicaraguan government and HKND will guarantee that persons and families on the route of the canal s construction will have living conditions superior to those they currently have citation needed See also edit nbsp Nicaragua portal nbsp Hong Kong portal Panama Canal Saint Lawrence Seaway Suez Canal Istanbul Canal Tehuantepec Route Thai Canal Sulawesi CanalReferences edit a b c d e Incertidumbres financieras desvanecen sueno de canal en Nicaragua El Financiero in Spanish AFP 21 February 2018 Le projet de canal du Nicaragua prend l eau Le Figaro in French 21 February 2018 a b c Cropsey Seth 9 April 2018 China sets its sights on South America The American Interest China has abandoned its attempts to construct a Nicaraguan Canal to compete with its Panamanian counterpart Passary Sumit 5 March 2015 Scientists wary about environmental effects of canal building project in Nicaragua Tech Times Retrieved 11 March 2015 a b c d e McDonald Michael D 17 March 2016 China slowdown not holding back Nicaragua canal contractor says BloombergBusiness Retrieved 21 March 2016 Brodhead Michael J A Wet Nasty Job Army Engineers and the Nicaragua Canal Survey of 1929 1931 Federal History 4 2012 pp 111 130 Nicaragua canal plan not a joke Chinese businessman BBC News 26 June 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2013 a b Rogers Tim 11 September 2012 Nicaragua taps China for canal project Nicaragua dispatch Archived from the original on 14 September 2012 a b Nicaragua signs memorandum with Chinese company to build a canal between two oceans Inside Costa rica 10 September 2012 Watts Jonathan 6 June 2013 Nicaragua fast tracks Chinese plan to build canal to rival Panama The Guardian London Retrieved 12 June 2013 Watts Jonathan Richards Gareth 6 June 2013 Nicaragua gives Chinese firm contract to build alternative to Panama Canal The Guardian London Retrieved 12 June 2013 Nicaragua Congress approves ocean to ocean canal plan BBC News 13 June 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2013 De Cordoba Jose 13 June 2013 Nicaragua revives its canal dream The Wall Street Journal Online ed Retrieved 9 March 2014 South China Morning Post 2015 11 28 Chinese company postpones US 50 billion canal project in Nicaragua as chairman s personal fortune tumbles Doubts deepen over Chinese backed Nicaragua canal as work starts Reuters 26 December 2014 Doubts raised over Nicaraguan canal project as trade patterns shift South China Morning Post 18 January 2015 Rogers Tim 30 January 2015 Watch Nicaraguan student challenge Sandinista canal rep in Spain Nicaragua Dispatch Retrieved 31 December 2015 Nicaragua Grand Canal a road to ruin PanAm Post 26 January 2015 Archived from the original on 30 June 2015 Retrieved 31 January 2015 a b Peralta Adriana 8 May 2017 Four years later China backed Nicaragua Canal struggles to take off the ground PanAm Post Archived from the original on 23 August 2017 Retrieved 8 May 2017 Goldberg Beverly 27 August 2018 Is the Nicaraguan mega canal failure good news for indigenous communities Open Democracy a b c Schmidt Blake 26 April 2018 Ex billionaire abandons office in prime Hong Kong tower Bloomberg a b Nicaragua pension changes ignite fiery protests Tampa Bay Times AP Explains The Associated Press 23 April 2018 Archived from the original on 23 April 2018 Retrieved 23 April 2018 Tobar Hector Kraul Chris 30 September 2006 Rival to Panama Canal planned The Los Angeles Times Retrieved 13 August 2013 Panama Canal opens 5B locks bullish despite shipping woes The New York Times The Associated Press 26 June 2016 Retrieved 26 June 2016 Miller Llana Sara 26 November 2006 Megaships may displace boats in Lake Nicaragua USA Today a b The project HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group Archived from the original on 12 May 2014 Dettoni Jacopo 10 June 2013 Chinese developer of US 40bn Nicaragua s interoceanic canal 100 private BN Americas Retrieved 26 May 2015 a b Project Background HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Archived from the original on 25 December 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2015 HKND The man behind the Nicaragua Canal Maritime CEO Archived from the original on 10 January 2015 Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b c d Lee Brianna 15 August 2014 Nicaragua s Canal Project Pushes Forward Despite Economic Environmental Questions International Business Times Retrieved 26 May 2015 a b c d Nicaragua s Canal Dreams Are Still Alive Stratfor 27 September 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Nicaragua looking to give Chinese company concession to build canal The Washington Post news summary Business 6 June 2013 Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Trends in global shipping trade demand a new canal Press release HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group 2014 Archived from the original on 11 May 2014 Retrieved 27 January 2016 Galeano Luis 11 June 2013 Nicaraguan legislators push ahead on giving Chinese company concession to build operate canal Associated Press Home Page hknd group com Nicaragua Canal Global Trade Project HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 20 November 2014 Nicaragua s Ortega Chinese businessman sign canal agreement Startribune com Retrieved 20 November 2014 HKND Group successfully obtains exclusive right to develop and manage Nicaragua Grand Canal for 100 years Press release HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group 2013 Archived from the original on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 29 July 2013 Weissenstein Michael Galeano Luis Manuel 13 December 2013 Nicaragua in thrall of Ortega s canal dream Associated Press Retrieved 13 December 2013 a b c d Forsythe Michael 25 June 2013 Chinese Billionaire Says Nicaragua Canal Has Investors Bloomberg News Titcomb J 12 January 2014 24bn rival to Panama Canal to break ground this year The Daily Telegraph London UK Retrieved 9 March 2014 Official Note PDF HKND Group 10 January 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2014 Retrieved 8 March 2014 Nicaragua approves route for 40 billion canal linking oceans Reuters 8 July 2014 Retrieved 16 July 2014 Oakland Ross 14 July 2014 Nicaragua Chinese partnership announces planned route for proposed inter oceanic canal Toronto Star Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 The eastern portion of the channel s length will include the construction of a 400 square kilometre 150 sq mi lake according to Chinese engineer Dong Yung Song As a result he said the canal s construction will not reduce the depth of Lake Nicaragua itself a b c d Nina Lakhani 26 October 2014 Giant canal threatens way of life on the banks of Lake Nicaragua The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 13 January 2015 Plumer Brad 26 February 2015 The fiasco that is the Nicaragua Canal explained Vox Retrieved 15 July 2015 Russia plans to join Nicaragua Canal project The Moscow Times 6 May 2014 Nicaragua launches construction of inter oceanic canal BBC News 23 December 2014 If you dig it will they come Nicaragua s controversial canal world politics review com 28 January 2015 Controversial Nicaragua canal project delayed Al Jazeera 25 November 2015 Retrieved 22 December 2015 Vidal John 4 October 2006 20bn and 10 years to build a giant rival for Panama canal The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 10 February 2024 McDonald Michael D 19 August 2015 China s Building a Huge Canal in Nicaragua But We Couldn t Find It Bloomberg Watts Jonathan 24 November 2016 Nicaragua canal In a sleepy Pacific port something stirs The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 12 December 2016 Nicaragua Canal project dealt new blow Havana Times 28 April 2018 a b c Impact of Interoceanic canal concession on human rights The resistance of rural communities PDF Report Nicaragua International Federation for Human Rights September 2016 Morel Blanca 21 February 2018 Funding evaporates for Nicaragua s 50 billion ocean to ocean canal digitaljournal com AFP Nicaragua s anti canal farmers demand participation and announce protests Havana Times 15 May 2018 Four police officers one protester killed in Nicaragua protest news Yahoo com AFP News 12 July 2018 Miranda Aburto Wilfredo 19 June 2019 The six year struggle against the Chinese Canal in Nicaragua Havana Times Protests erupt in Nicaragua over interoceanic canal The Guardian 24 December 2014 Retrieved 26 April 2016 a b Orsi Peter 21 December 2014 Rising anger as Nicaragua canal to break ground AP Retrieved 13 January 2015 Two killed in Nicaragua canal protest France 24 24 December 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Cecilia Medal Salaverry 14 August 2015 Nicaragua Canal A violation of civil liberties Development and Cooperation D C Retrieved 14 January 2016 a b c d Can a coast to coast canal solve Nicaragua s poverty problem Thomson Reuters Foundation News 1 December 2017 Retrieved 8 October 2014 a b Daley Suzanne 3 April 2016 Lost in Nicaragua a Chinese Tycoon s Canal Project The New York Times p A4 Retrieved 4 April 2016 President Daniel Ortega has not talked about the canal in public for months And there are no visible signs of progress Cows graze in the field where Mr Wang officially began the project Nicaragua Canal project owners reduce presence to a minimum Havana Times 30 March 2017 Nicaragua renews environmental permit for Chinese canal project 7 September 2017 Nicaragua Canal Project Description PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2015 Retrieved 16 April 2015 ACP 2009 Annual Report PDF Panama Canal Authority 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Watts Jonathan 24 November 2016 Nicaragua canal In a sleepy Pacific port something stirs The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 9 March 2017 Canal construction to generate strong opposition Business Monitor BMI Research 28 December 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2015 尼加拉瓜大运河开工中国公司拥有100年运营权 Ifeng News in Simplified Chinese Retrieved 23 December 2014 Nicaragua Canal Project Description PDF hknd group com HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group Archived from the original PDF on 10 January 2015 Retrieved 25 March 2019 El Nuevo Diario The fall in oil prices has benefited the Canal HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Group Retrieved 27 September 2015 Entrevista La caida del precio del petroleo ha beneficiado al canal El Nuevo Diario Retrieved 27 September 2015 Nicaragua launches construction of inter oceanic canal BBC 23 December 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b Has Beijing backed a US 50bn canal project in Nicaragua Funding mystery continues South China Morning Post 28 December 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2015 Nicaragua canal developer HKND plans IPO CEO Reuters 23 December 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2015 Miller Matthew 4 May 2014 China s ordinary billionaire behind grand Nicaragua canal plan Reuters Retrieved 9 January 2015 GCR News Wang s billions slashed by stock fall raising doubts over Nicaragua canal globalconstructionreview com 2 October 2015 Schmidt Blake Mak Pei Yi 27 November 2017 China s unlucky tycoon The canal madman keeps finding trouble Bloomberg Nicaragua data worldbank org Data The World Bank Retrieved 24 November 2015 Nicaragua www worldbank org Report Projects amp Operations all projects The World Bank Retrieved 24 November 2015 York Claudia Leon 11 July 2013 Canal deal cripples Nicaraguan sovereignty again activist South China Morning Post Retrieved 9 January 2015 a b Lakhani Nina 3 August 2017 Amnesty condemns campaign of harassment against Nicaragua canal critics The Guardian Retrieved 22 August 2017 Miller Greg 26 February 2014 Why the plan to dig a canal across Nicaragua could be a very bad idea Wired Wired Science Retrieved 23 September 2016 McCrary Jeffrey Hernandez Aldo Saldana Octavio Rueda Ricardo 2015 Biodiversity on canal route already at risk PDF Nature 525 7567 33 doi 10 1038 525033b PMID 26333461 S2CID 45851150 Archived from the original PDF on 17 February 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2016 van Note Sara 25 May 2018 China s American canal could sacrifice Nicaragua s great lake North Carolina Public Radio Partlow Joshua 4 February 2015 Can a Chinese billionaire build a canal across Nicaragua The Washington Post e97 art 2 PDF uca edu ni Report Revista Encuentro full citation needed Meyer Axel Huete Perez Jorge A 19 February 2014 Conservation Nicaragua Canal could wreak environmental ruin Nature 506 7488 287 289 doi 10 1038 506287a PMID 24558657 Condit Richard 27 July 2015 Extracting environmental benefits from a new canal in Nicaragua Lessons from Panama PLoS Biol 13 7 e1002208 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1002208 PMC 4516262 PMID 26214182 A Quebecer dies in a plane crash in Nicaragua stopru org Archived from the original on 11 October 2015 Retrieved 23 October 2015 Nicaragua Dulce Ecotourism Granada Nicaragua Ecotours in Nicaragua www nicaraguadulce ecotourism com Retrieved 23 October 2015 Educacion Ambiental www marena gob ni Retrieved 23 October 2015 Nicaragua www fsdinternational org Foundation for Sustainable Development International Retrieved 23 October 2015 Miller Greg 26 February 2014 Why the plan to dig a canal across Nicaragua could be a very bad idea Wired Costantini Peter 29 June 2016 What happened to the Nicaragua Canal project Havana Times Cuba Retrieved 27 July 2016 Conan Rebecca 21 June 2013 Chinese firm to develop US 20bn Panama Canal alternative in Honduras BN Americas Retrieved 17 January 2015 The dragon and the gringo The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved 27 November 2015 SICE Novedades en materia de politica comercial Centroamerica Mexico www sice oas org Retrieved 27 November 2015 Institution proesa gob sv Further reading editBrodhead Michael J January 2012 A Wet Nasty Job Army Engineers and the Nicaragua Canal Survey of 1929 1931 PDF Federal History 4 111 130 Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 24 January 2012 Howard Brian Clark 20 February 2014 A planned rival to the Panama Canal carries environmental consequences National Geographic magazine National Geographic Society Archived from the original on 1 March 2014 Tsekov Borislav 6 January 2015 About Nicaragua Canal geopolitics and south stream pipeline PDF Report Institute of Modern Politics External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nicaragua Canal Gran Canal Interoceanico de Nicaragua The Grand Interoceanic Canal of Nicaragua in Spanish Nicaragua La Voz del Sandinismo Nicaragua Canal Project Description PDF Report HKND 5 January 2015 Archived from the original on 10 January 2015 via HKND Group official webpage Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 Retrieved 7 June 2013 11 30 N 85 00 W 11 5 N 85 0 W 11 5 85 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicaragua Canal amp oldid 1223444633, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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