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Instanbul's crazy project!

Zulkarneyn

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Recep Tayyip Erdogan said "Canal Istanbul" would be between 28 and 31 miles (40 and 45 kilometers) long and would link the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara, which leads to the Aegean Sea.
"We have today embarked on the greatest project of the century," Erdogan said. He said it would be a bigger undertaking than the Panama or Suez canals.

Istanbul was already the only City in world where a sea passed through, with this new project two seas will pass through Istanbul!

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has been speaking of a “crazy project” developed for İstanbul for about half a year, finally announced the details of the project on Wednesday.

The prime minister yesterday publicly announced the details of his long-anticipated crazy project, saying the government would create a new Bosporus in İstanbul. The new project will focus on fortifying the city against natural disasters, Erdoğan said.

On Oct. 7, 2010, Today's Zaman reported in its story headlined “PM envisions 2nd strait in İstanbul as hedge against environmental disaster” that Erdoğan was planning to create a second Bosporus strait by 2023 to mitigate the effects of potential oil spills and flooding. Basing this information on a source close to Erdoğan, Today's Zaman reported that Erdoğan was planning an immense construction project to build a canal between the Black Sea and the Marmara Sea through Silivri and Çatalca, the two westernmost districts in İstanbul, which will take the burden of naval transportation off the Bosporus.

To include the defense related, this development will greatly improve the Turkish Navy with an easier access to the black sea in case of a conflict.

channel.jpg


Today's Zaman's gets
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2011/04/27/general-eu-turkey-new-waterway_8436749.html
 
whats Instantbul?:what:

Please don't tell me that you have never heard of Istanbul. Istanbul is Turkey's most populated and greatest city, in fact one of the greatest cities in the world, if not the greatest.

And sorry for the misspelling, of course it is supposed to be Istanbul.
 
Please don't tell me that you have never heard of Istanbul. Istanbul is Turkey's most populated and greatest city, in fact one of the greatest cities in the world, if not the greatest.

Oh ok.. i saw the thread title and thought its something else.. I know Istanbul, its one of the most beautiful cities in the world.
 
ref:Erdogan announces plans to build canal to rival Panama, Suez - CNN.com

Erdogan announces plans to build canal to rival Panama,

SuezBy Ivan Watson and Yesim Comert, CNNApril 27, 2011 -- Updated 1814 GMT (0214 HKT)
The proposed Istanbul Canal will outshine its rivals in Panama (pictured) and Suez, Egypt, according to Turkey's Prime Minister.STORY HIGHLIGHTS
The proposed canal will be 45 kilometers long, the prime minister says
Erdogan wouldn't reveal the exact route
He says the project will rival the Panama and Suez canals
t1larg.panama.canal.gi.jpg


Istanbul (CNN) -- Less than two months before voters are expected to go to the polls in national elections, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan Wednesday announced ambitious plans to dig a new canal through Istanbul that would bypass the existing Bosphorus Strait.

"Today we are rolling up our sleeves for one of the biggest projects of the century, which will outshine the Panama and Suez Canals," Erdogan said at a party conference.

The proposed Istanbul Canal would run for more than 45 kilometers, or about 28 miles, from the Black Sea through Turkey's largest city and commercial capital, to the Marmara Sea -- roughly parallel to the Bosphorus Strait, the natural body of water that already bisects Istanbul.

The Panama Canal is 77 kilometers (roughly 48 miles) in length, while the Suez Canal in Egypt is more than 190 kilometers (118 miles) long.

Erdogan said one of the goals of the proposed canal would be to reduce the huge amount of international cargo ships that regularly traverse the congested Bosphorus.

"One of the most important reasons for this project will be to reduce Bosphorus traffic and minimize threats," Erdogan said, in comments published on the prime minister's official web-site.

More than a 100 ships a day sail up and down the Bosphorus. Many of them carry dangerous cargos of crude oil and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). The fast currents and narrow bends in the historic channel have led to several accidents on the banks of Turkey's most populous city. The deadliest incident took place in 1979, when a Romanian oil tanker exploded after colliding with another vessel, killing dozens of people and leaking tons of oil into the sea.

In his speech Wednesday, Erdogan conceded that critics in the Turkish media had referred to his plan as a "crazy project."

"With this project, there will be two seas running through Istanbul," he said, adding that the canal would result in the creation of a man-made island and another peninsula.

The prime minister said the proposed canal would be 145 meters (475 feet) wide and 25 meters (82 feet) deep. But he stopped short of announcing the exact route of the proposed waterway. The location and financing of the project would be kept secret, Erdogan said, to "prevent any negativity and unfairness and injustice."

ref:http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/27/istanbul-new-bosphorus-canal

Istanbul's new Bosphorus canal 'to surpass Suez or Panama'Turkish prime minister, Recep Erdogan, trumpets 'crazy and magnificent plan' for channel to reduce traffic and oil spills

Share138 Comments (51) Sam Jones and agencies guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 27 April 2011 20.17 BST Article history
Istanbuls-Galata-bridge.-007.jpg


Istanbul is to build a canal for commercial shipping in order to cut traffic through the Bosphorus. Photograph: Renaud Visage/Getty Images
The ferries, fishing boats and pleasure cruisers which crisscross the Bosphorus may one day have more room for manoeuvre on the watery highway that separates Europe and Asia.

If Turkey's prime minister can get what he calls his "crazy and magnificent" plan to work, the gargantuan tankers that clog the strait will be diverted into a man-made waterway linking the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan's project, which he calls Canal Istanbul, is nothing if not ambitious: the channel will be around 30 miles long, 25 metres deep and 150 metres wide. It would, he confidently predicted, be an unparalleled feat of engineering. "We are building the canal of the century, a project of such immense size that it can't be compared to the Panama or Suez canals," he said.

Although Erdogan, whose career began as mayor of Istanbul, his home city, has previously alluded to the "crazy project", the announcement only came as he campaigned for a general election on 12 June. Ten days ago, he announced a plan to split the city in two to help it cope with an ever-growing population expected to soon peak at 17 million.

The 19-mile-long Bosphorus strait that bisects Istanbul into a European and an Asiatic half is the sole shipping passage between the Black Sea and the Mediterranean. As a result, the waterway is heavily congested with tanker traffic to and from Bulgaria, Romania, Georgia, Ukraine and southern Russia, and has been the scene of many maritime accidents.

According to Erdogan, the ships carry a total 0f 139m tons of oil, 4m tons of liquefied petroleum gas and 3m tons of chemicals through the Bosphorus each year, thereby threatening the lives of nearly 2 million people who live and work on the banks of the waterway.

In 1994, the Bosphorus was closed for days when an oil tanker and a cargo ship collided, killing 29 sailors. In 1999, a Russian-built tanker split in two at the mouth of the strait, spilling 235,000 gallons of fuel and blackening miles of shoreline. Erdogan said that such calamities would be a thing of the past with the canal.

"Bosphorus traffic will be reduced to zero," he said. "Water sports will take place on the Bosphorus, transport within the city will be established, [and Istanbul] will return to its former days."

However, the leader of the ruling AK party was not forthcoming about the canal's precise location, other than that it would be cut through the peninsula on which Istanbul's European side stands in time for the centenary of the founding of the Turkish republic in 1923; nor did he comment on the cost. "Turkey more than deserves to enter 2023 with such a crazy and magnificent project," he told a cheering audience. "Istanbul will become a city with two seas passing through it."

Erdogan said that it would take two years to do feasibility studies, and therefore the location had to be kept secret to avoid land speculation.

Town planners speculate that the canal will be built west of the town of Silivri in Turkey's Thrace region, since areas closer to Istanbul are heavily populated. The government has already announced a plan to build an airport near Silivri.

Kadir Topbas, the mayor of Istanbul and a member of Erdogan's party, welcomed the project, saying the canal would eliminate the risk posed by heavy tanker traffic to Istanbul and the environment.

Others were more sceptical.

Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of the Republican People's party, Erdogan's main rival, was sceptical as to the prime minister's faith in the canal: "This country needs men who think and produce, but not crazy men. This project is not about people. It's about making AK party supporters rich."

The bold plan also received mixed reviews online, with posters on a Turkish newspaper website describing it variously as "a brilliant concept", "yet more expense and argument and traffic snarls", and an "election-time fantasy".

Antony Oliver, editor of New Civil Engineer magazine, said that while the channel would be "a major piece of civil engineering", it should be eminently achievable.

Guy Battle, an environmental engineer and lead partner within the sustainability services group at Deloitte, said the engineering work would be the easy bit: "If we can do a tunnel under the channel and build a new highway through 34km of the Alps, then cutting across that land patch isn't going to be a big task."

The big challenge, he said, would be ensuring that the canal had an impact that was more than purely economical. "The canal should be viewed not merely as a canal but as a piece of social infrastructure that brings net benefit to the country," he said. "Can it be carbon neutral? What innovations can be developed through its construction and operation?"

• This article was amended on 28 April 2011. The original standfirst on the web version of the story referred to Erdogan as the Turkish president. This has been corrected.
 
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