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  • Now for the most dangerous project on the agenda. The world’s longest underwater tunnel

  • will connect the cities of Dalian and Yantai across the Bohai Sea, passing through two

  • deadly earthquake fault zones. At 76 miles long it will be longer than the current first

  • and second-ranked underwater tunnels combined, and at a cost of $42 billion, it will be extremely

  • expensive. But the Chinese calculate that it will be worth it.

  • For one, it will slash the eight hour drive between the two cities to under two hours.

  • It will also connect China’s isolated northern rustbelt with its wealthy east coast, adding

  • an additional $3.7 billion to the economy each year.

  • The experience could also establish the Chinese as the preeminent submarine diggers in the

  • world, and would be a serious practice run for far more ambitious potential future Mega-MEGA-projects

  • like connecting China to South Korea, or even Russia to the United States across the Bering

  • Strait--yes, that has actually been proposed.

  • This isn’t the first underwater tunnel project for Chinese engineers, either, who already

  • gained some experience by completing the 3.8 mile-long Jiaozhou Bay Tunnel in 2011. But

  • while the Bohai Sea is roughly the same depth as Jiaozhou Bay, the tunnel underneath it

  • will be 20 times longer.

  • When it comes to construction, if theyre lucky, the Chinese will encounter only soft

  • seabed, allowing them to use Tunnel-Boring Machines the whole way. But if they run into

  • harder rock, theyre going to have to use thedrill-and-blastmethod embraced

  • by the Japanese during construction of the Seikhan Tunnel. Using tons of dynamite hundreds

  • of feet underwater is dangerous business, and it resulted in the unfortunate deaths

  • of four workers over the course of that project, and maaaany accidental leaks.

  • Reporter: “In 1976 the project hit its biggest crisis when 80 tons of seawater a minute began

  • leaking in. 1.5 km of tunnel flooded. It took five months to get back on track.”

  • Bryce: The Bohai Tunnel will also have to withstand magnitude 8.0 earthquakes. In 1976,

  • the deadliest earthquake in modern history -- a 7.8 -- killed a record 650,000 people

  • in Tangshan and surrounding areas. In 1969 a quake measuring 7.4 on the Richter scale

  • shook the Bohai Bay itself. And there doesn’t seem to be much the engineers can even do

  • about that threat besides simply reinforcing the strength of the tunnel walls. Of course,

  • they could simply not bore a long hole under a deep bay through two fault zones, but that

  • doesn’t really seem to be an option at this point.

  • Because officials throughout China are under enormous pressure to hit GDP economic growth

  • targets, and there aren’t many other options that could provide anywhere near as much economic

  • benefit as the Bohai Tunnel, which should break ground sometime in 2016.

  • For TDC, I’m Bryce Plank. Thanks for watching.

Now for the most dangerous project on the agenda. The world’s longest underwater tunnel

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