Citizendia
Your Ad Here

The Great Recycling and Northern Development (GRAND) Canal of North America (or GCNA) is a water management proposal designed by Newfoundland engineer Thomas Kierans to solve increasingly serious North American water shortage problems (Water politics). Newfoundland and Labrador (ˈnuːfɨn(dlənd ən(d ˈlæbrəˌdɔr (Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador is a province of Canada, the tenth and latest to join the Confederation Thomas William Kierans, FCSCE P Eng is an engineer and innovator Water politics, sometimes called hydropolitics, is Politics affected by Water and Water resources. The GCNA, which relies upon proven water management technologies (see Zuider Zee and California Aqueduct below) has been promoted by Kierans since the early 1960’s. The Zuiderzee (ˌzaɪdɚ ˈzeɪ] Dutch: Zuiderzee, ˈzœydərzeː was a shallow Inlet of the North Sea in the northwest of the Netherlands The California Aqueduct is a 444  Mile  (715  km)-long Aqueduct in the United States

Worsening freshwater deficits threaten the shared Great Lakes and other vital areas in Canada and the United States. Great Lakes Areas of Concern are designated geographic areas within the Great Lakes Basin that show severe environmental degradation The Laurentian Great Lakes are a chain of freshwater lakes located in eastern North America, on the Canada–United States border. Kierans proposes that to avoid forecasted severe impacts from future droughts in Canada and the United States (in addition to water conservation) acceptable new freshwater sources must be found. Water Crisis is a term that refers to the status of the world’s Water resources relative to human demand Water conservation refers to reducing the use of water The goals of water conservation efforts include Sustainability - To ensure availability for

The premise of the GCNA is that one potentially acceptable new source of fresh water is run-off from natural precipitation after its collection in an outflow-only, sea level dyke-enclosure. In this way the fresh water is collected just before it is normally lost in the world’s oceans and is not diverted from any existing uses. All run-offs from the U. S. and Canada averages about 160,000 m3 per second, or the flow of 28 Niagara Rivers. Sixty percent occurs in Canada, which has only 10% of both nations’ total population.

Image:North American Fresh Water Run-Off.png

Similar projects have been implemented around the world. The Netherlands has recycled run-off since 1928 from a sea level, outflow-only, multi-use, freshwater dyke-enclosure in the former Zuider Zee. The Zuiderzee (ˌzaɪdɚ ˈzeɪ] Dutch: Zuiderzee, ˈzœydərzeː was a shallow Inlet of the North Sea in the northwest of the Netherlands For 50 years an expanding California Aqueduct with a 1200m pump-lift recycles up to 115 m3/sec of northern river run-off from upstream of the sea in San Francisco Bay over 700km southward in the San Joaquin River valley to create productive new farm and urban areas in former arid land. The California Aqueduct is a 444  Mile  (715  km)-long Aqueduct in the United States New recycled run-off proposals are now being considered throughout the world.

Contents

Proposal

In his GCNA proposal, Kierans asserts that experience in the Netherlands demonstrates that a large new freshwater source can be created in Canada’s James Bay by collecting run-off from many adjacent river basins in a sea level, outflow-only dyke-enclosure. Moreover, he claims that California’s Aqueduct proves that run-off to James Bay can be beneficially recycled long distances and over high elevations via the GRAND Canal. The purpose of the GCNA would be to stabilize Great Lakes-St. Lawrence River levels, flows and water quality. It would also deliver, via the Great Lakes, new fresh water from the James Bay dyke-enclosure to many other deficit areas in Canada and the United States.

Image:GCNArecyling solution.gif

Controversy

In 1959, Canada officially claimed that U. S. expansion of a Chicago diversion from Lake Michigan would harm downstream Canadian areas in the Great Lakes Basin. In contrast, Kierans argues, it can now be shown that recycling run-off from a dyke-enclosure in Canada’s James Bay is not harmful and can bring both nations many useful benefits including: a) more fresh water in Canada than now exists despite exports to the U. S. ; b) improved fisheries and shipping in Hudson Bay due to recycled run-off’s increase in the Bay’s now harmful low salinity; c) substantially improved Great Lakes water quality due to the increased flows; d) lower electricity-user cost by integrating water transfer energy needs with peak power demand; and e) enhanced flood controls and forest fire protection in both nations. [1]

According to Kierans, project organization to recycle run-off from James Bay Basin could be like that for the St. Lawrence Seaway. Capital costs for about 160 million users will exceed $100 billion. But, he claims, “before construction is completed, the total value of social, ecologic and economic benefits in Canada and the U. S. will surpass the project’s costs. ” [2]

By 1985, former Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa and several major engineering companies endorsed detailed GRAND Canal concept studies. Robert Bourassa GOQ ( July 14, 1933 &ndash October 2, 1996) was a politician in Quebec, Canada (Power From the North, Robert Bourassa, Prentice Hall of Canada Ltd,May 1985. )

Image:Bourassa2.jpg Image:Bourassasignature2.png

Kierans on left Bourassa on Right

Inscription: To Mr. Kierans, a Canadian with an extraordinary vision for the good of his country, With all my gratitude, Robert Bourassa, April 16,1985.

But, complains Kierans, “…some misinformed environmentalists and news media refuse to accept the proven Netherlands and California recycled run-off projects. [3] Further, they refuse to acknowledge the fundamental differences between NAWAPA’s (see Cadillac Desert) harmful “headwater diversion” and the environmentally friendly “recycled run-off” of the GRAND Canal. For the documentary see Cadillac Desert (film (1997 Cadillac Desert by Marc Reisner is a 1986 (see maps below). Unfortunately, their political influence continues to block Canadian government support for the urgently needed detailed studies of recycled run-off from James Bay. Until the Canadian Government supports such studies, drought and freshwater quality in Canada and the U. S. will continue to worsen”

Image:Comparison.gif

The above contrasting North American drought relief proposals show, at right, a conventional diversion concept known as the NAWAPA Plan. It involves halting the flow of Canada’s major west coast rivers and diverting their flow to the southwestern U. S. , Canadian Prairies and Great Lakes. Flooding in mountain valleys and downstream flow disruption in existing rivers are apparent. At left and in sharp contrast,according to Kierans,it is shown that recycling of fresh water run-off from James Bay does not involve such major flooding or flow reduction. Canada’s fresh water will be substantially increased.


References

External links


© 2009 citizendia.org; parts available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License, from http://en.wikipedia.org
Dapyx Software network: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic