This project was
recently brought to my attention and though we have political bias oozing into
the story, the bigger story is that we have a largely intact water carrying
infrastructure. What I am not impressed
with is the need to drill wells to pump an aquifer.
What is demonstrated however
is just how easy it is a manufacture quality pipe of large dimension to then
install in the ground to secure their weight handling.
With this technology,
it is simple and plausibly cheap enough to dam a feeder of the Congo to produce
a managed reservoir to feed water from the Congo Basin directly north into Libya
and points in between. It certainly
appears superior to canal building, however like canal building, we would
prefer to drive what is effectively an aqueduct to avoid any pumping costs at
all.
Libya’s “Water Wars”
and Gaddafi`s Great Man-Made River Project
By Mathaba
Global
Research, May 13, 2013
It
was Muammar Gaddafi`s dream to provide fresh water for all Libyans and to make
Libya self-sufficient in food production.
Libyans
called it the eighth wonder of the world. Western media called it a pet project
and the pipe dream of a mad dog. The “mad dog” himself in 1991 prophetically
said about the largest civil engineering venture in the world:
After
this achievement, American threats against Libya will double. The United States
will make excuses, but the real reason is to stop this achievement, to keep the
people of Libya oppressed.
Gaddafi’s
dream
It
was Muammar Gaddafi’s dream to provide fresh water for all Libyans and to make
Libya self-sufficient in food production. In 1953, the search for new oilfields
in the deserts of southern Libya led to the discovery not just of significant
oil reserves, but also of vast quantities of fresh water trapped in the
underlying strata. The four ancient water aquifers that were discovered, each
had estimated capacities ranging between 4,800 and 20,000 cubic kilometers.
Most of this water was collected between 38,000 and 14,000 years ago, though
some pockets are believed to be only 7,000 years old.
###
After
Gaddafi and the Free Unitary Officers seized power in a bloodless coup from the
corrupt King Idris during the Al-Fateh Revolution in 1969, the Jamahiriya government
nationalized the oil companies and spent much of the oil revenues to harness
the supply of fresh water from the desert aquifers by putting in hundreds of
bore wells. Large farms were established in southern Libya to encourage the
people to move to the desert. It turned out that the majority of the people
however preferred life in the northern coastal areas.
Therefore
Gaddafi subsequently conceived a plan to bring the water to the people instead.
The Libyan Jamahiriya government conducted the initial feasibility studies in
1974, and in 1983 the Great Man-Made River Authority was set up. This fully
government funded project was designed in five phases, each of them largely
separate in itself, but which eventually would combine to form an integrated
system. As water in Gaddafi’s Libya was regarded to be a human right, there has
not been any charge on the people, nor were any international loans needed for
the almost $30 billion cost of the project.
In
1996, during the opening of Phase II of the Great Man-Made River Project,
Gaddafi said:
This
is the biggest answer to America and all the evil forces who accuse us of being
concerned with terrorism. We are only concerned with peace and progress.
America is against life and progress; it pushes the world toward darkness.
Development
and destruction
At
the time of the NATO-led war against Libya in 2011, three phases of the Great
Man-Made River Project were completed. The first and largest phase, providing
two million cubic metres of water a day along a 1,200 km pipeline to Benghazi
and Sirte, was formally inaugurated in August 1991. Phase II includes the
delivery of one million cubic metres of water a day to the western coastal belt
and also supplies Tripoli. Phase III provides the planned expansion of the
existing Phase I system, and supplies Tobruk and the coast from a new
wellfield.
The
‘rivers’ are a 4000-kilometer network of 4 meters diameter lined concrete
pipes, buried below the desert sands to prevent evaporation. There are 1300
wells, 500,000 sections of pipe, 3700 kilometers of haul roads, and 250 million
cubic meters of excavation. All material for the project was locally
manufactured. Large reservoirs provide storage, and pumping stations control
the flow into the cities.
The
last two phases of the project should involve extending the distribution
network together. When completed, the irrigation water from the Great Man-Made
River would enable about 155,000 hectares of land to be cultivated. Or, as
Gaddafi defined, the project would make the desert as green as the flag of the
Libyan Jamahiriya.
In
1999, UNESCO accepted Libya’s offer to fund the Great Man-Made River
International Water Prize, an award that rewards remarkable scientific research
work on water usage in arid areas.
Many
foreign nationals worked in Libya on the Great Man-Made River Project for
decades. But after the start of NATO’s so-called humanitarian bombing of the
North-African country in March 2011, most foreign workers have returned home.
In July 2011, NATO not only bombed the Great Man-Made River water supply
pipeline near Brega, but also destroyed the factory that produces the pipes to
repair it, claiming in justification that it was used as “a military storage
facility” and that “rockets were launched from there”. Six of the facility’s
security guards were killed in the NATO attack, and the water supply for the
70% of the population who depend on the piped supply for personal use and for
irrigation has been compromised with this damage to Libya’s vital
infrastructure.
The
construction on the last two phases of the Great Man-Made River Project were
scheduled to continue over the next two decades, but NATO’s war on Libya has
thrown the project’s future – and the wellbeing of the Libyan people – into
great jeopardy.
A
German language documentary shows the size and brilliance of the project:
Water
Wars
Fresh
clean water, as provided to the Libyans by the Great Man-Made River, is
essential to all life forms. Without fresh water we simply cannot function.
Right now, 40% of the global population has little to no access to clean water,
and that figure is actually expected to jump to 50% by 2025. According to the
United Nations Development Program 2007, global consumption of water is
doubling every 20 years, more than twice the rate of human population growth.
Simultaneously, every single year most of the major deserts around the world
are becoming bigger and the amount of usable agricultural land in most areas is
becoming smaller, while rivers, lakes and major underground aquifers around the
globe are drying up – except in Gaddafi’s Libya.
In
the light of the current world developments, there is more to the NATO
destruction of the Great Man-Made River Project than being an isolated war
crime. The United Nations Environment Program 2007 describes a so-called “water
for profit scheme”, which actively promotes the privatization and
monopolization for the world’s water supplies by multinational corporations.
Meanwhile the World Bank recently adopted a policy of water privatization and
full-cost water pricing, with one of its former directors, Ismail Serageldin,
stating:
“The
wars of the 21st century will be fought over water”.
In
practice this means that the United Nations in collaboration with the World
Bank plans to secure water resources to use at their disposal, and that once
they totally control these resources, the resources become assets to be
reallocated back to the enslaved nations for a price. Those prices will rise
while the quality of the water will decrease, and fresh water sources will
become less accessible to those who desperately need it. Simply put, one of the
most effective ways to enslave the people is to take control of their basic
daily needs and to take away their self-sufficiency.
How
this relates to the NATO destruction of Gaddafi’s Great Man-Made River Project
in July 2011 can be best illustrated by the Hegelian Dialectic, popularly known
as the concept of Problem -> Reaction -> Solution. In this case, by
bombing the water supply and the pipes factory, a Problem was created with an
ulterior motive, namely to gain control over the most precious part of Libya’s
infrastructure. Subsequently a Reaction in the form of an immediate widespread
need was provoked as a result of the Problem, since as much as 70% of the
Libyans depend on the Great Man-Made River for personal use as well as for the
watering of the land. A month after the destruction of the Great Man-Made
River, more than half of Libya was without running water. Ultimately a
predetermined Solution was implemented: in order to have access to fresh water,
the inhabitants of the war-torn country had no choice but to fully depend on –
and thus to be enslaved to – the NATO-installed government.
A
‘democratic’ and ‘democracy-bringing’ government that came to power through the
wounding and killing of thousands of Libyans by ‘humanitarian bombs’, and that
overthrow the ‘dictator’ whose dream it was to provide fresh water for all
Libyans for free.
War
is still peace, freedom is still slavery.
Sources
and further information:
http://www.water-technology.net/projects/gmr/
http://www.uruknet.info/?new=81150
http://american_almanac.tripod.com/libya.htm
http://www.activistpost.com/2012/12/the-coming-water-wars.html
http://www.caseyresearch.com/articles/coming-water-wars
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/the-groundwater-footprint-over-population-threatens-water-resources_082012
http://www.uruknet.info/?new=81150
http://american_almanac.tripod.com/libya.htm
http://www.activistpost.com/2012/12/the-coming-water-wars.html
http://www.caseyresearch.com/articles/coming-water-wars
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/the-groundwater-footprint-over-population-threatens-water-resources_082012
France and the US were against this project of self sustainability due to the added food production that the Sahara could provide.
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