By Vince Beiser
Mr. Beiser is the author of the forthcoming “The World in a Grain: The Story of Sand and How It Transformed Civilization.”
One of the most
dangerous confrontations between the United States and China is heating
up. Warships are being deployed, bombers are taking wing and threats are
being exchanged — all of it sparked by China’s growing mastery of the
use of the world’s most overlooked natural resource: sand.
The
point of contention is a set of man-made islands China has built in a
strategic and hotly disputed patch of the South China Sea. It’s one of
the world’s busiest shipping routes, and home to some 10 percent of the
world’s fish. What’s more, billions of barrels of oil and trillions of
cubic feet of natural gas lie under the seafloor.
So
it’s no surprise that virtually every country in the region — China,
Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia and the Philippines — lays at least
partial claim to a scattering of dozens of rocks and reefs called the
Spratly Islands that sit strategically in that area.
But
China has expanded its claims in the sea for decades, including some
Spratly outcrops that it seized from Vietnam in a 1988 clash that left
dozens of soldiers dead. And, particularly since 2014, it has used its
industrial might to create facts in the water.
In
recent years, China has built up an armada of oceangoing dredging
ships, among the most technologically advanced in the world. The
country’s annual dredging capacity — the volume of sand and muck it can
haul up from underwater — has more than tripled since 2000, to more than
one billion cubic meters. That’s more than any other nation. Starting
in late 2013, Beijing set a fleet of these dredgers to work raising
millions of tons of sand from the sea floor and using it to expand its
pieces of territory in the Spratly Islands. Within 18 months, these
ships built nearly 3,000 acres of new land.
This type of mega-scale land reclamation
is increasingly common. In recent decades, advancing technology has
made it easier and cheaper to move ever greater quantities of sand from
ever greater depths and deliver it with ever greater accuracy onto
predetermined places.
The biggest
dredges today are more than 700 feet long; stood on end, they would top a
60-story apartment building. They carry pipes that can pull up sand
from 500 feet below the water’s surface. Countries from Singapore to the
Netherlands to the United Arab Emirates are using them to expand their
coastlines and even build new islands from scratch.
China has done
the same; in 2015 alone it created the equivalent of two Manhattans of
new real estate. All told, according to a Dutch research group, human
beings since 1985 have added 5,237 square miles of artificial land to
the world’s coasts — an area about as big as Connecticut or the nation
of Jamaica.
The process often entails
enormous environmental damage. China recently suspended all commercial
land reclamation projects because of the harm they were inflicting on
coral reefs and coastal ecosystems. They have some experience with the
issue; China dumped so much sand onto reefs in the Spratlys that one
American marine biologist called it “the most rapid rate of permanent
loss of coral reef area in human history.”
But
of even greater concern is how China’s island building is serving its
military ambitions. Almost as soon as the sand was dry on the Spratlys,
China began building military bases. Beijing’s armed forces have
installed antimissile weaponry, runways capable of handling military
aircraft, structures that United States officials believe are designed
to house long-range surface‑to‑air missile launchers, and port
facilities that may be capable of accommodating nuclear submarines.
This
expansion of China’s military power in the Pacific is an intensifying
flash point between China, the United States, and its Pacific allies. At
his confirmation hearings to become secretary of state, Rex Tillerson
compared China’s Spratly buildup to Russia’s invasion of Crimea. In
recent weeks, the United States has flown B-52s over, and sailed two
warships past, the disputed archipelago.
For
its part, China landed a long-range bomber on one of the newly made
islands. In June, Defense Secretary Jim Mattis denounced China’s buildup
as “intimidation and coercion.” President Xi Jinping responded that “we
cannot lose even one inch of (our) territory.” All of which shows that
in the 21st century, geopolitical power goes not only to those who
control territory — but those who can manufacture it.
(Souce: nytimes.com)
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