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China’s South-to-North Water Transfer Project: Engineering the Continent’s Largest River Reroute
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China’s South-to-North Water Transfer Project: Engineering the Continent’s Largest River Reroute

Photography & Words by Tariq Al-Fayed June 23, 2026 2 MIN READ
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China’s thirst for water has spawned the South-to-North Water Transfer Project, a massive network of canals, tunnels and pumps that shuttles water from the Yangtze basin to the arid north. Nearly 700 million people depend on the scheme, which began construction in 2002. The eastern branch, operational since 2013, moves ↑ 4 cubic km annually, while the central line, opened a year later, adds ↑ 3 cubic km to Beijing and Tianjin’s supply.

South-to-North Water Transfer Project: Scope and Progress

The twin routes stretch over 1,500 km, pulling water uphill 65 m on the eastern leg and relying on gravity for the central corridor. The Danjiangkou Reservoir was enlarged, displacing 350 000 residents, to raise water levels sufficient for the gravity‑driven flow.

“The project is a fix to fix the fix,”

notes environmental researcher Stevan Harrell.

Environmental and Geopolitical Fallout

Critics argue the diversion lowers downstream flow, threatens ecosystems, and fuels saltwater intrusion. Water per capita in the north drops to 3 990 ft³, far below the UN’s scarcity threshold of 35 000 ft³. Plans for a western route across the Tibetan Plateau—still in feasibility stage—have alarmed neighboring states, who fear reduced runoff from the Brahmaputra and Mekong. Reuters and Bloomberg have highlighted the diplomatic unease. The plateau’s seismic activity, extreme altitude and freezing risk make construction a formidable challenge; tunnels over 300 km and dams up to 300 m tall are envisaged. Meanwhile, China’s broader water strategy mixes dam building, cloud seeding and massive tree‑planting, a legacy of the pandemic era when water security entered top‑level planning. Whether conservation can replace megaprojects remains hotly debated, but for now the South-to-North Water Transfer Project stands as the world’s most ambitious attempt to rewrite a continent’s hydrology.


Words by Tariq Al-Fayed (Middle East Geopolitical Strategist).

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