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@@Shadowgunner785 🥹 If we reach 100k we will create the South America desk for real. I already have someone in mind who could perfectly chair it. Any idea who? 😜
Happened to stumble across this video and I'm amazed! The 4k map illustrations and high quality footage is great to look at. Then you have the right mix of music and narration so it's nice on the ears. Subscribed.
I have read many articles about the Three Gorges Dam, but you are the first one, who pointed out, that it is not only for electricity production, but also for storing fresh water. I am always amazed, how you put thing in a different light, then most other media outlets! ❤
To be honest, the Yangtze River is located in southern China and does not lack precipitation, so there is no need to store water at all. On the contrary, due to excessive water, there are annual floods. So the first function of the Three Gorges Dam is flood control, followed by power generation. Storage water? I have never heard of it in China
@@李荣-n7s Storage of water means water regulation such that the water flow is enough for adequate hydro power generation and ship navigation during the dry season. It also intrinsically means flood and drought control since you need to store water to stop flood waters and release water during droughts.
@@sumyamchi Water storage is also used for flood prevention. The first purpose of the Three Gorges Dam is flood control. China did not build the Three Gorges Dam just for water storage. I'm not saying it casually. In Chinese high school textbooks, it's written that the reason why China built the Three Gorges Dam - the primary purpose is flood control
A little bit of nitpicking for the section at 16:36... Russia and Brazil both have the problem that most of their navigable rivers are where neither most of the industry, nor most of the people are located, mainly in the Amazon and in Siberia, so there isn't really a point in trying to move a lot of additional cargo along them. Russia has the added difficulty of a lot of their navigable rivers freezing during winter, thereby making them unreliable, and other potentially more useful ones like the Volga connecting to inland bodies of water like the Caspian Sea, only being connected to the Don and thereby the Black Sea by a fairly small canal. Otherwise it's a really good video
Yeah! I'm glad to be there at the top!😂 BTW love your cats! They're absolutely adorable! I also have a 2 years old cutie which keeps me company when I work on my videos😍
It's always good to remember, that some of the most powerful and richest nations have ease of access. River have been essential for creating trade, as well as discovering new land which we have seen in the Americas. China's rivers are a valuable lifeline for it's economy, and this can be seen as very important when dealing with them as an adversary in the future, as these rivers were how many European nations and later Japan attacked and conquered Chinese lands. And if these rivers are cut off in any way, it can destroy china's economy. Great video as all ways Kamome!!!! Now we just need a video on South Africa or South America and I will be able to die in peace!!!
That's on point. Those rivers are one of China's logistical backbones and if now support China's economy they can equally threaten, if they can't be used, or are used by potential adversaries. Rivers sustains big urban centres. From London to NYC, from Moscow to Shanghai, those rivers are often overlook strategic factors. Hahahahah we'll need to have plenty of videos on South America and South Africa before you can die in peace😂
@@Kamome163 Homeboy needs to calm down on Europeans attacking and conquering Chinese lands. I don't believe that's how Hwyytte people spread democracy any more.
While you are historically accurate, that type of conquest of China is no longer feasible. During the Second World War, Japan tried to do something similar but got caught in a logistical quagmire in the upper Yangtze. The resistance Japan faced there was ultimately devastating and made it so that Japan couldn't completely conquer China once they moved the capital to Chongqing. It took Britain a long time to develop the kind of river boat supremacy to subdue China but that was only after they seized Hong Kong. The reoccuring theme is that China was humiliated because they did not focus on naval power and were technologically behind. Now China has the largest navy in the world and is only a generation of weapon systems away from the US. America lost to Vietnam in a war of conquest IMMEDIATELY AFTER they became independent. No country has the capacity to infiltrate China without an astronomical investment into their military with the sole intent of conquering China like the Steppe peoples.
fantastic video! I love the high quality and edited graphic's i can imagine they take a lot of time of effort! but also want to shine a light on some smaller things, like the counter in the corner for which source you used for it. accompanied with you calm voice im sure you'll do amazing! I had just one small thing: you tend to turn a lot when zooming in on maps. while cinematographically a bit of movement is nice, for anchoring where we are geographically it might be nice to tone down the movement a bit. so we are not upside down for instance, as we are mostly familiar with a south to north perspective.
Thank you so much for the kind comment and feedback Bernd! I really appreciate it. Do you think a less dynamic and North up composition would be more understandable? Do you think adding a North pointing indicator in one corner could somehow reduce the disorientation? I really appreciate you taking the time to write this message and I'll try to improve on the next one. Thanks :)
Fantastic videos and graphics. One point: brasil is a bad example to compare to the others for river navigation as the steep escarpment that much of coastal brasil abuts in very limiting and that is why inland brasil is very sparsely populated
Thank you Dan, that's a great point. IIRC correctly that's also why Brazilian big cities are quite afar from each other. On the other hand, I was wondering wouldn't waterways transports help in overcoming that elevation difference, or is it just logistically unfeasible?
This you tube channel is by far has the best video presentation of world affairs coupled with excellent graphics. The historical perspective and current analysis of specific topics is superlative!
So you've never heard of the Unified Deep Water System in Russia? Not sure how much more they could do to utilize their inland waterways. Theoretically could extend it into Siberia and tie in the Kara Sea, Laptev Sea, Sea of Okhotsk, and Lake Baikal, but that seems a bit infeasible. Even if they weren't currently leading their country to ruin.
@@Kamome163 I didn’t and I don’t mean to say you don’t do the minimum research-wise. However you made it seem like channels, dams and dredging are not without major negative consequences not only for nature but the Chinese people. I’m not an expert but I heard from multiple sources their river works are very harmful to both water volumes, quality, river stability and overall environment. I expected you would shed some light on that. However my comment pertained mostly to Russia’s potential in river transport, in the end of this video you made it seem like they have a lot of it. No, they don’t, because they mostly flow northward, and that creates huge ice jams every fall and spring and such rivers go into economically infeasible areas. I get that there’s only so much you can put in a video. I just you know, expected just a bit more. Yeah, with fame come expectations. That’s just my feedback, you can ignore it as is your privilege.
@@watershed8685 oh I understand where you’re coming from and I really do appreciate that you took the time to argument your reply. There’s a lots of other people who comments without even checking the sources and I’m glad you’re not one of those. You don’t know how many people do that😅 I guess you are specifically referring to the three gorges dam and the North South transfer project. What I could gather from my research is that there are very different analysis results on the impact of those two projects and I preferred to stay focused on the freshwater quantity and quality. That’s a trade-off I had to make otherwise the video would’ve been noticeably longer. Gotcha. That’s a great point and thank you for raising that up. In the reference to Russia, I referred to Deep Water Unified System which IIRC is not that prone to icing. OC other rivers ice much more often. If you want you can check a previous video on Russia weakness and I talk about that there. That being said, thank you for your frank reply! BTW if you wanna go deeper on Chinese waterways environmental and economic impacts, in the video bibliography there’s a link to a world bank work paper that’s quite interesting. Thanks
The North-South water transfer system is already a failure, and so is the Three-Gorges project. The first has so much sedimentation build-up that it is unusable in many places; the second has disrupted waterflow down stream to the point that what was once the largest freshwater lake in the PRC is silting up and dying. The northwest, including Beijing, has pumped so much ground water that large swathes are subsiding. 80% of the PRC's underground water is polluted, some to the point of being unsalvageable. Just as with economics, the Chinese Communist Party shows in it infrastructure-mania that it has no concept of secondary or tertiary effects, ones that doom their wasteful spending-sprees to failure.
Don’t know for sure, but heard that in China, the 40% that do have tap water generally won’t use it to drink or cook, due to contamination concerns, and that even small apartments will have a water cooler and a bunch of water refills.
If the Jones Act is repealed the US would win the navigable waterway contest. It is also important to consider where the navigable waterways flow from and to. Are China's navigable waterways strategically located to facilitate efficient transport of cargo from inland manufacturing and agriculture hubs to ports and population consumption areas?
DUDE!!! DA FAQ! These visuals!!! Insane so so good! That north west view southeast on china topography rocked my world! Thanks for all the great trippy new perspectives!!
@@Kamome163i have one thing to criticize 😅 the profile picture of "K" in your channel is good but the colors are not , they don't attract because blue and orange don't match well for me haha , wish you the best ❤.
Brazil, barely has waterways because geography isn't so favorable, since most of geography is mountainous, resulting in many rapids and waterfalls, so they need to build huge dams, but most of it doesn't have locks since rivers are mostly used for hydropower, a major example of this is the Parana River, a tributary of the Rio de La Plata where it was build at the time the largest Hydropower dam in the world: the Itaipu Dam, but there is no locks into it. So cargo instead of loading into vessels in the Parana river or tributaries such as the Tietê, all cargo is loaded into trucks and goes in a huge highway journey, passing through São Paulo homonymus capital, and then take the Imigrantes Highway in the Serra do Mar moutains all the way down to the Port of Santos, and unload there and export to the exterior markets. There are railways build in the late 1800's which helps, but must of the cargo is transported by truck since both Mato Grosso (do Sul) barely have any Railways, and they are West of the Parana River. But considering that cargo going down the Parana river would necessarity to go first into Paraguay and then into a port in Argentina or Uruguay, Brazil decided that it wasn't advantegeous, and looking at the historic at the region, you can see why Brazil was involved in six wars in the 1800's for the control the Mesopotamia Region upstream of Rio de La Plata.
Thank you so much for the illuminating point. Do you think the if those dams had locks, could they be used to extend inland navigation? Would that be feasible? I'd love to learn more about this, do you have recommended book or article? If you do, could you send me the title here? sekishouproduction@gmail.com
@@Kamome163 Yes, I do think so, the Tietê river has become a navigable waterway but far as I know isn't used as much as it should, assuming for the reasons I have already covered. I'm going to make futher comentaries via email so we can make this conversation more easily, with links, and images etc.
@@Kamome163 It would at a huge expense, locks on the Paraná basin would have to be built on mass. Those rivers aren't navigable, or just a few steps away from that. Brazil has a huge network of navigable rivers in the Amazon basin, where the rivers are the main way of transportation, but its mostly rainforest over there.
@@Joacazz Thanks for the comment! I guess it would make much more sense to build those along the Paranà basin. IIRC that’s also where the big chunk of Brazilian agricultural economy is based at.
Fresh water is necessary for the survival of all living organisms and is the basis of the fluids of living organisms. China understands the need to provide water for its 1.4 billion people as it is a basic necessity for lives. Thus the huge infrastructure for dam construction and the diversion of water from the south to the north of China. Dams and their reservoirs play an important role in social and economic development as they help supply seasonal water needs or generate renewable energy.
Western China is indeed short of water and drought. But most of it is a no-man's land. However, Chinese mouth is densely populated by the Yangtze and Yellow rivers and countless tributaries. The author apparently does not know anything about the geography and reality of China.
This is really great and top quality content. Thank you and ... thanks that you do it like this and not ... like some view-maximising maniac. Your voice and tone is excellent
In all honesty more video needs to be made of New Orleans during Hurricane Harvey and focus more at home turf. We had so many influx of people fleeing during flooding of the entire city with dam collapsing. Please don’t worry about them for godsakes we have plenty issues at home.
Unlike other countries mentioned, Russia can use most of the waterways only during the summer and early autumn. Although, when the ice becomes thick enough, the rivers are used as roads for trucks - probably for a bigger part of the year.
I AM REALLY DISAPPOINTED THAT YOU SAID THAT THIS CANAL WAS THE LONGEST IN THE WORLD BUT YOU FAILED TO SAY HOW LONG IT WAS. HOW COULD YOU FAIL TO PROVIDE INFORMATION SUCH AS THAT???
You only just touched on the water polluissues within china. They are much worse than you suggest. A vast amount of water in china is so polluted it's beyond any purification system known to fix. You also left out how china is preventing water flow into other countries such as veitnam etc. The Mekong River is 30cm below its normal levels. China has placed 2 dams on the Mekong with 9 more on the drawing boards. This is extremely bad news for any countries down streem
Kamome, I'm a little confused, because I've always heard that America's big advantage has always been our vastly superior network of continuously navigable waterways? Can you help me? What am I thinking of?
@@cdmcmxcvi1249 i still don't understand America's huge advantage in navigable waterways compared to China. It's just that the Mississippi is longer than the Yangtze?
@@cdmcmxcvi1249 okay, but I read a stat that China has way more inland navigable waterways, and that a lot of them are interconnected. So, most of them aren't navigable for barges, but are navigable for canoes? What's the distinction? Is it the wide and deep and weather thing for most of China? That makes the vast majority of their navigable waterways useless to industrial traffic?
@@bcarrico329Rivers in north China are mostly unnavigable due to low and uneven precipitation. Yangtze and pearl river in south China have high navigability value which connect inland areas to the coast
You know, sometimes I focus too much on the big future targets without enjoying the present. Which is a gift (in all senses). This comment made me remember that and made me realize how valuable it is having people like you in the community. Thanks coltrueg🙇♂️
Use static maps please. Spinning them round on a turntable, while talking about south flowing rivers or growing northern cities make it very hard to figure out where and what you’re talking about. (Sometimes with technology, just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should ! )
Firstly: amazing graphics. Secondly I think we really are entering the "new normal" which means nations of different sorts are feeling the pressure under their current economical and ecological environments, which they either couldnt change for the better in the past or just looked away in the past. Also we shouldnt forget that the human species really made a big show in reproduction in the last 100 years. I think the weight of civilization is something we will discuss more and more in the future, and we will and have to learn a lot.
Your video is informative, beautifully edited, and well informed about the challenges China faces concerning water volume and more significantly, pollution levels. I have been to China many times, my wife and daughter are Chinese citizens from northern China. Pollution levels and water quality in China are both atrocious. Seeing first hand how the Chinese government operates, I would say that China will do the barest of minimum to fight pollution, water quality and climate change. By minimum I mean little more than what it takes to make sure it's work force doesn't die in large quantities. I use the term work force, rather than population, because ultimately that's all the Chinese government cares about.
Water consumption is greatest in Industrial Processes; while population was a strong second place. The fact that industrial economies allowed a greater population does not change the way Industry used water. And that is true in India too. Look at the dying of textiles or the making of silk. Where did China's economy grow first? Textiles, carpets, clothing, home goods, footwear, toys, basic tools and housewares, plastics and metals. Large quantities of cheap products from Tee shirts to underwear and socks to jeans and coats, light bulbs, nails and wire and nuts and bolts (fasteners) hand tools. Those were the explosive areas of manufacturing growth in the 1970's replacing American basic goods manufacturing.
If the Caspian Sea were connected to the Black Sea by a canal (e.g. a canal from the mouth of the Don at the Sea of Azov to the coast of the Caspian Sea near Artezian), the Caspian Sea would fill up again to sea level. The Caspian Sea would also increase in area and thus more water would evaporate. The result would be more precipitation around the Caspian Sea, especially west of it. The effect would probably extend to northwest China.
Search " End of Juan Guaidó: US-appointed Venezuelan coup leader ousted by ex allies " on yT. Mike Pompeo was correct " We lied, We cheated, We stole "
In 2021, only 40% of Chinese had access to tap water? where did you get this data??? I mean: China will get a coverage of 87% in rural areas( data from China govement ), and in cities ,this data is almost 100%... Anyway, Fresh water resources are indeed a problem that the Chinese government has been facing, but things are far from as serious as this video says. The period when China’s water pollution was the worst and the era when China was most water-scarce has long passed
Well-done video, but the comparison with EU and US is apples to oranges. China uses vastly more coal (thus more river transport) and Western countries rely more on gas and oil (pipelines). In general you can't really look at the use of ships versus trains versus trucks without looking at the value of the goods. China consumes huge amounts of raw materials and imported soya and grains (all bulk goods, hence ship transport where possible).
First off wanted to say really appreciate the time put into research this video, this is the first time I have heard of that 2-1-2-18 network, and it gave a good basis for understanding the Chinese internal waterways of China. However I wanted question the last part of the video, with the heavy focus on internal waterway freight transport. Despite an almost double rate of use of Chinese internal waterways than their EU and US equivalence the rate is still rather small (only 7%), and despite the mode of transport being far cheaper than train and road (by Cost/tonnes-km) it seems it is still less relied on. It would be interesting to go further into the reasoning why it is rather unused or unreliable if you do a future video perhaps on the transport infrastructure (rails and roads of china) and why they are more heavily relied on for transportation.
@@hughmungus2760 I think it is more so the size of the watershed, and location of watershed given to other locations like cities and bodies of water. (Data from Wikipedia) For example China's largest river basins Yangtze, Yellow River, and Pearl River combined amount to 3 million km2 while just the Mississippi-Missouri River Basin is 3.2 million km2, and that's without the additions of the other river watersheds in US shared with Canada and Mexico (St Lawrence, Snake River, and Colorado). Also I think the interoperability of the waterways between the Pacific and Atlantic is also exploitable by US. The other 2 countries that seems to have a large river basin are Brazil and India. I would venture to say the reason Brazil's is hard to exploit is the inhospitability of the Amazon forest and vast distance between their watershed and the major cities Sao Paolo and Rio de Janeiro on the other side of Brazil, but I could be wrong. And for India I have no idea.
@@Kamome163 All the Chinese people I have ever met asked me if tap water was drinkable and were surprised when I said it is safe to drink. As far as I know Chinese people only drink bottled water but of course direct feedback is needed.
China doesn't have a water resource scarcity, they have a water distribution and recycling problem that can certainly be resolved. Considering we live on a water world, the total water usage of all human activity (2,640 mi³ = 11,004,000,480,000,000 (q L) Quadrillion Litres) is an insignificant, tiny fraction of a single percent of all the water in, on and falling to the surface from space. And the vast majority of this water is cycled back into the environment. It is "conservatively" estimated that the Earth has ~325, 000, 000 mi³ (cubic miles) of water or 1.355 sextillion litres. Let this sink in (pun): There are 1,101,117,130,711.3 (trillion) Gallons (U.S.) in a cubic mile or 4,404,468,522,845.2 (trillion) litres. 1 mi³ = 4,168,182,000,000 trillion L Roughly 118,000 mi³ or 495,000 km³ of water is cycled through the atmosphere every year. China, India and the USA consumed the highest annual totals: 289 mi³, 283 mi³ and 252 mi³ respectively, followed by Brazil at 115 mi³. Out of approximately 3,250,000 mi³ of fresh water on the planet, It is estimated that the current level of human freshwater consumption is about 4,370 km³ or close to 1,050 mi³ per year. Even in arid regions water exists in many forms which can be harvested. As an example, By using moisture harvesters with high surface area, porous structure, water affinity, fast vapor diffusion, and molecular diffusion, the water vapor in atmosphere can be collected as freshwater. The moisture-harvesting materials could be MOF-based materials, hygroscopic materials, and polymeric gels. There are approximately 16,000 operational desalination plants, located across 177 countries, which generate an estimated 95 million m3/day (22 mi³) of fresh water. Micro desalination plants operate near almost every natural gas or fracking facility in the United States. Furthermore, micro desalination facilities exist in textile, leather, food industries, etc.
Pre pandemic, they were building 2 coal based power plants per months. If they don’t clean up their pollution problems, in 10 years they will have to deal with a huge health issue with their population
"China boasts the largest navigable waterways network on Earth", isn't the US the first? I think I heard this information in this channel too. You are talking about extension or area?
To give another perspective on why Water is a weakness. You see, the great Pm of Singapore said Air Conditioning was the greatest invention ever. And you know air conditioning requires lots of water, and thats for a country the size of Singapore, a drop in the ocean. There are probably 100x societies the size of singapore in china and they are consumer socieitys. outside that, we have producer societies which which produce our food, etc. and things like this. I am always praying for the best outcome for all.
Great point! Expanding on LKY and Singapore’s reliance of water, in his memories LKY said that Malaysia was Singapore main existential threat as without its water, Singapore would’ve survived three days.
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What software do you use?
@@jascrandom9855 Blender
@@Kamome163 That's so cool!
@@jascrandom9855 and the crazy part is that it’s open code! Oh and I also use QGIS and Davinci
beautifully done video. pure science, no bias and lovely animations. the pace is brilliant and narrator is really good. keep it up 👍
This was a visual work of art. I was in awe of your graphics use and display
Thank you so much Sonie
I can't believe that this channel only has 50k subscribers, deserves so much more!
It only had 1k not too long ago
It was only a year ago that this guy had 2k subscribers and I said the same thing. Wait till next year, there might be over 100k
@@Shadowgunner785 1 year from now? I would bet at least 125k subs.
@@looinrims True, and you've been there since. This confirms that quality might be better than quantity.
@@Shadowgunner785 🥹 If we reach 100k we will create the South America desk for real. I already have someone in mind who could perfectly chair it. Any idea who? 😜
Happened to stumble across this video and I'm amazed! The 4k map illustrations and high quality footage is great to look at. Then you have the right mix of music and narration so it's nice on the ears. Subscribed.
The editing, informational detail is actually insane and it's even visually artistic. This deserve a sub!
I have read many articles about the Three Gorges Dam, but you are the first one, who pointed out, that it is not only for electricity production, but also for storing fresh water. I am always amazed, how you put thing in a different light, then most other media outlets! ❤
Wow, thank you so much Norbert. I'm glad that I hit the nail on the head there.
Isn’t it obvious?
To be honest, the Yangtze River is located in southern China and does not lack precipitation, so there is no need to store water at all. On the contrary, due to excessive water, there are annual floods. So the first function of the Three Gorges Dam is flood control, followed by power generation. Storage water? I have never heard of it in China
@@李荣-n7s Storage of water means water regulation such that the water flow is enough for adequate hydro power generation and ship navigation during the dry season. It also intrinsically means flood and drought control since you need to store water to stop flood waters and release water during droughts.
@@sumyamchi Water storage is also used for flood prevention. The first purpose of the Three Gorges Dam is flood control. China did not build the Three Gorges Dam just for water storage. I'm not saying it casually. In Chinese high school textbooks, it's written that the reason why China built the Three Gorges Dam - the primary purpose is flood control
The quality of your videos are insane for such a small channel. Keep it up and you’re gonna make it soon enough
Thank you so much Sereh!
Yes insanely shitty
as a chinese, it's really amazing to see a foreigner done such a great job about introducing china hydraulic engineering, please go on!
I’m coming for your government! I’ll respect to you as an individual.
that's cool! are you in china? isn't YT still blocked in the mainland?
@@ryanreviews8566 yep
@@alwhistler1039 I'm terrified of crackers.
A little bit of nitpicking for the section at 16:36... Russia and Brazil both have the problem that most of their navigable rivers are where neither most of the industry, nor most of the people are located, mainly in the Amazon and in Siberia, so there isn't really a point in trying to move a lot of additional cargo along them. Russia has the added difficulty of a lot of their navigable rivers freezing during winter, thereby making them unreliable, and other potentially more useful ones like the Volga connecting to inland bodies of water like the Caspian Sea, only being connected to the Don and thereby the Black Sea by a fairly small canal.
Otherwise it's a really good video
Probably my top contender for most under rated YT channel
Yeah! I'm glad to be there at the top!😂 BTW love your cats! They're absolutely adorable! I also have a 2 years old cutie which keeps me company when I work on my videos😍
It's always good to remember, that some of the most powerful and richest nations have ease of access. River have been essential for creating trade, as well as discovering new land which we have seen in the Americas.
China's rivers are a valuable lifeline for it's economy, and this can be seen as very important when dealing with them as an adversary in the future, as these rivers were how many European nations and later Japan attacked and conquered Chinese lands. And if these rivers are cut off in any way, it can destroy china's economy.
Great video as all ways Kamome!!!! Now we just need a video on South Africa or South America and I will be able to die in peace!!!
That's on point. Those rivers are one of China's logistical backbones and if now support China's economy they can equally threaten, if they can't be used, or are used by potential adversaries.
Rivers sustains big urban centres. From London to NYC, from Moscow to Shanghai, those rivers are often overlook strategic factors.
Hahahahah we'll need to have plenty of videos on South America and South Africa before you can die in peace😂
@@Kamome163 Homeboy needs to calm down on Europeans attacking and conquering Chinese lands. I don't believe that's how Hwyytte people spread democracy any more.
Keep your imperialist wet dreams to yourself. The West needs to stop invading & murdering people.
@@Western_Decline Malaysian Chinese CCP bot detected
While you are historically accurate, that type of conquest of China is no longer feasible. During the Second World War, Japan tried to do something similar but got caught in a logistical quagmire in the upper Yangtze. The resistance Japan faced there was ultimately devastating and made it so that Japan couldn't completely conquer China once they moved the capital to Chongqing. It took Britain a long time to develop the kind of river boat supremacy to subdue China but that was only after they seized Hong Kong. The reoccuring theme is that China was humiliated because they did not focus on naval power and were technologically behind. Now China has the largest navy in the world and is only a generation of weapon systems away from the US. America lost to Vietnam in a war of conquest IMMEDIATELY AFTER they became independent. No country has the capacity to infiltrate China without an astronomical investment into their military with the sole intent of conquering China like the Steppe peoples.
This is the most visually stunning informative video I've seen on RUclips
fantastic video! I love the high quality and edited graphic's i can imagine they take a lot of time of effort! but also want to shine a light on some smaller things, like the counter in the corner for which source you used for it. accompanied with you calm voice im sure you'll do amazing! I had just one small thing: you tend to turn a lot when zooming in on maps. while cinematographically a bit of movement is nice, for anchoring where we are geographically it might be nice to tone down the movement a bit. so we are not upside down for instance, as we are mostly familiar with a south to north perspective.
Thank you so much for the kind comment and feedback Bernd! I really appreciate it. Do you think a less dynamic and North up composition would be more understandable? Do you think adding a North pointing indicator in one corner could somehow reduce the disorientation?
I really appreciate you taking the time to write this message and I'll try to improve on the next one. Thanks :)
Fantastic videos and graphics. One point: brasil is a bad example to compare to the others for river navigation as the steep escarpment that much of coastal brasil abuts in very limiting and that is why inland brasil is very sparsely populated
Thank you Dan, that's a great point. IIRC correctly that's also why Brazilian big cities are quite afar from each other. On the other hand, I was wondering wouldn't waterways transports help in overcoming that elevation difference, or is it just logistically unfeasible?
as a Chinese I can confirm that we do melt upon touching water
truly underrated channel
love your content
keep up the amazing work
This is very well put together. Fantastic job.
Thanks
Be like water my friend
😂 That cracked me up, pretty accurate
This you tube channel is by far has the best video presentation of world affairs coupled with excellent graphics. The historical perspective and current analysis of specific topics is superlative!
So you've never heard of the Unified Deep Water System in Russia? Not sure how much more they could do to utilize their inland waterways. Theoretically could extend it into Siberia and tie in the Kara Sea, Laptev Sea, Sea of Okhotsk, and Lake Baikal, but that seems a bit infeasible. Even if they weren't currently leading their country to ruin.
Yeah, I feel like this channel sacrifices too much of research quality as of late and doesn’t go deep enough considering the vastness of geopolitics
That's a good point. I've made a video on it ruclips.net/video/l5KXeFdpyaE/видео.html
@@watershed8685 Did you even check the video bibliography?
@@Kamome163 I didn’t and I don’t mean to say you don’t do the minimum research-wise. However you made it seem like channels, dams and dredging are not without major negative consequences not only for nature but the Chinese people. I’m not an expert but I heard from multiple sources their river works are very harmful to both water volumes, quality, river stability and overall environment. I expected you would shed some light on that. However my comment pertained mostly to Russia’s potential in river transport, in the end of this video you made it seem like they have a lot of it. No, they don’t, because they mostly flow northward, and that creates huge ice jams every fall and spring and such rivers go into economically infeasible areas.
I get that there’s only so much you can put in a video. I just you know, expected just a bit more. Yeah, with fame come expectations. That’s just my feedback, you can ignore it as is your privilege.
@@watershed8685 oh I understand where you’re coming from and I really do appreciate that you took the time to argument your reply. There’s a lots of other people who comments without even checking the sources and I’m glad you’re not one of those. You don’t know how many people do that😅
I guess you are specifically referring to the three gorges dam and the North South transfer project. What I could gather from my research is that there are very different analysis results on the impact of those two projects and I preferred to stay focused on the freshwater quantity and quality. That’s a trade-off I had to make otherwise the video would’ve been noticeably longer.
Gotcha. That’s a great point and thank you for raising that up. In the reference to Russia, I referred to Deep Water Unified System which IIRC is not that prone to icing. OC other rivers ice much more often. If you want you can check a previous video on Russia weakness and I talk about that there.
That being said, thank you for your frank reply! BTW if you wanna go deeper on Chinese waterways environmental and economic impacts, in the video bibliography there’s a link to a world bank work paper that’s quite interesting. Thanks
I finally find your channel I could not remember where I watched this video
I can't get enough of your graphics and presentation. Its just beautiful 😍
The North-South water transfer system is already a failure, and so is the Three-Gorges project. The first has so much sedimentation build-up that it is unusable in many places; the second has disrupted waterflow down stream to the point that what was once the largest freshwater lake in the PRC is silting up and dying. The northwest, including Beijing, has pumped so much ground water that large swathes are subsiding. 80% of the PRC's underground water is polluted, some to the point of being unsalvageable. Just as with economics, the Chinese Communist Party shows in it infrastructure-mania that it has no concept of secondary or tertiary effects, ones that doom their wasteful spending-sprees to failure.
Hey Edward, thanks for the comment! Could you link sources for the sediments in the NSP and “80% of groundwater is polluted”?
This channel deserves my subscription. Wow! What a visual quality!
Damn the visuals on this video are really good, gotta subscribe, you sir are really talented.
I can’t believe this channel has only 97K subscribers, deserves so much more!
Quality of video is amazing and the content is 10/10👌 (first time watcher)
Thank you so much!
I applaud your use of footnotes and disclosure of sources in your videos.
Thank you Anthony :)
Almost 100k after 4 months. New subscriber💕
China's landscape is so beautiful, I love that we can see the mountains in 3d maps
Don’t know for sure, but heard that in China, the 40% that do have tap water generally won’t use it to drink or cook, due to contamination concerns, and that even small apartments will have a water cooler and a bunch of water refills.
the sad reality is the Dam holds the water when it’s dry season, release it when it’s wet
The US navigable waterway network is far larger than China's
Great content as always, Kamome. Looking forward to more!
Imagine if the rio de la plata was conected to the amazon internally. That would be a powerfull network 😁
I totally agree! And that would drastically helps Brazil overcoming its rough geography! We might do a video on that🤩
U make me subscribe man great videos ...
Amazingly well researched! You'll have the million subs you deserve soon if you keep this quality up!
It would be awesome if they would be all as kind as you are! I’ll keep it up and try to improve even more! 🙇♂️
Keep these videos coming
If the Jones Act is repealed the US would win the navigable waterway contest. It is also important to consider where the navigable waterways flow from and to. Are China's navigable waterways strategically located to facilitate efficient transport of cargo from inland manufacturing and agriculture hubs to ports and population consumption areas?
Really nice work exploring this topic!
Thank you so much catbertz
Can't wait watch the video.
Incredible video yet again.
Thanks man🥹 Looking forward for your help in the next maps design
Water is the foundation of every civilization.
You videos are so well made ! I found a great channel. Thanks and i look forward to more of your videos ! ! !
I personally would like a video about the Sichuan basin in China & how Sichuan basin played an important role in Chinese history
You got a sub from Bangladesh 🇧🇩 😍 , just amazed by quality and information
DUDE!!! DA FAQ! These visuals!!! Insane so so good! That north west view southeast on china topography rocked my world! Thanks for all the great trippy new perspectives!!
Discovered that channel minutes ago , Please keep the good work.
Thank you so much Amine! We will💪
@@Kamome163i have one thing to criticize 😅 the profile picture of "K" in your channel is good but the colors are not , they don't attract because blue and orange don't match well for me haha , wish you the best ❤.
@@aminechouigui6287 I see! Thanks for the feedback I’ll think on that🙌
Yes, me too
@@peta333 Thank you, Pete!🙌
Brazil, barely has waterways because geography isn't so favorable, since most of geography is mountainous, resulting in many rapids and waterfalls, so they need to build huge dams, but most of it doesn't have locks since rivers are mostly used for hydropower, a major example of this is the Parana River, a tributary of the Rio de La Plata where it was build at the time the largest Hydropower dam in the world: the Itaipu Dam, but there is no locks into it.
So cargo instead of loading into vessels in the Parana river or tributaries such as the Tietê, all cargo is loaded into trucks and goes in a huge highway journey, passing through São Paulo homonymus capital, and then take the Imigrantes Highway in the Serra do Mar moutains all the way down to the Port of Santos, and unload there and export to the exterior markets. There are railways build in the late 1800's which helps, but must of the cargo is transported by truck since both Mato Grosso (do Sul) barely have any Railways, and they are West of the Parana River.
But considering that cargo going down the Parana river would necessarity to go first into Paraguay and then into a port in Argentina or Uruguay, Brazil decided that it wasn't advantegeous, and looking at the historic at the region, you can see why Brazil was involved in six wars in the 1800's for the control the Mesopotamia Region upstream of Rio de La Plata.
Thank you so much for the illuminating point. Do you think the if those dams had locks, could they be used to extend inland navigation? Would that be feasible?
I'd love to learn more about this, do you have recommended book or article? If you do, could you send me the title here? sekishouproduction@gmail.com
@@Kamome163 Yes, I do think so, the Tietê river has become a navigable waterway but far as I know isn't used as much as it should, assuming for the reasons I have already covered.
I'm going to make futher comentaries via email so we can make this conversation more easily, with links, and images etc.
@@Kamome163 It would at a huge expense, locks on the Paraná basin would have to be built on mass. Those rivers aren't navigable, or just a few steps away from that. Brazil has a huge network of navigable rivers in the Amazon basin, where the rivers are the main way of transportation, but its mostly rainforest over there.
@@GBA811 awesome I really appreciate that!
@@Joacazz Thanks for the comment! I guess it would make much more sense to build those along the Paranà basin. IIRC that’s also where the big chunk of Brazilian agricultural economy is based at.
Thank you for highlighting this issue and thats the precise reason why china is trying sp hard to capture arunachal pradesh.
Fresh water is necessary for the survival of all living organisms and is the basis of the fluids of living organisms. China understands the need to provide water for its 1.4 billion people as it is a basic necessity for lives. Thus the huge infrastructure for dam construction and the diversion of water from the south to the north of China. Dams and their reservoirs play an important role in social and economic development as they help supply seasonal water needs or generate renewable energy.
Western China is indeed short of water and drought. But most of it is a no-man's land. However, Chinese mouth is densely populated by the Yangtze and Yellow rivers and countless tributaries. The author apparently does not know anything about the geography and reality of China.
This is really great and top quality content. Thank you and ... thanks that you do it like this and not ... like some view-maximising maniac.
Your voice and tone is excellent
Very good. I thought there would be more on the north/south water diversion project.
In all honesty more video needs to be made of New Orleans during Hurricane Harvey and focus more at home turf. We had so many influx of people fleeing during flooding of the entire city with dam collapsing. Please don’t worry about them for godsakes we have plenty issues at home.
Unlike other countries mentioned, Russia can use most of the waterways only during the summer and early autumn.
Although, when the ice becomes thick enough, the rivers are used as roads for trucks - probably for a bigger part of the year.
No mention of weather modification? There are companies worldwide supplying precipitation made to order.
I AM REALLY DISAPPOINTED THAT YOU SAID THAT THIS CANAL WAS THE LONGEST IN THE WORLD BUT YOU FAILED TO SAY HOW LONG IT WAS. HOW COULD YOU FAIL TO PROVIDE INFORMATION SUCH AS THAT???
Another great video to experience!
♥♥♥
You only just touched on the water polluissues within china. They are much worse than you suggest. A vast amount of water in china is so polluted it's beyond any purification system known to fix. You also left out how china is preventing water flow into other countries such as veitnam etc. The Mekong River is 30cm below its normal levels. China has placed 2 dams on the Mekong with 9 more on the drawing boards. This is extremely bad news for any countries down streem
Top notch sponsor segway. Had me paying attention at first. lol
LOL
And a happy new year to you too Kamome, great video! 👍
Kamome, I'm a little confused, because I've always heard that America's big advantage has always been our vastly superior network of continuously navigable waterways? Can you help me? What am I thinking of?
They have more “waterways”, our fewer waterways are longer.
@@cdmcmxcvi1249 i still don't understand America's huge advantage in navigable waterways compared to China. It's just that the Mississippi is longer than the Yangtze?
@@bcarrico329 All of our inland rivers which are wide, deep, and not subject to the weather patterns. And the inter-coastal waterway.
@@cdmcmxcvi1249 okay, but I read a stat that China has way more inland navigable waterways, and that a lot of them are interconnected. So, most of them aren't navigable for barges, but are navigable for canoes? What's the distinction? Is it the wide and deep and weather thing for most of China? That makes the vast majority of their navigable waterways useless to industrial traffic?
@@bcarrico329Rivers in north China are mostly unnavigable due to low and uneven precipitation. Yangtze and pearl river in south China have high navigability value which connect inland areas to the coast
Uh did I just refresh this video and see you jump from 55k to 57k. Well it was bound to happen sooner or later. Congrats your about to blow up.
You know, sometimes I focus too much on the big future targets without enjoying the present. Which is a gift (in all senses). This comment made me remember that and made me realize how valuable it is having people like you in the community. Thanks coltrueg🙇♂️
Chiba faces an industry water consumption problem.
Use static maps please. Spinning them round on a turntable, while talking about south flowing rivers or growing northern cities make it very hard to figure out where and what you’re talking about. (Sometimes with technology, just because you can do something doesn’t mean you should ! )
Firstly: amazing graphics. Secondly I think we really are entering the "new normal" which means nations of different sorts are feeling the pressure under their current economical and ecological environments, which they either couldnt change for the better in the past or just looked away in the past. Also we shouldnt forget that the human species really made a big show in reproduction in the last 100 years. I think the weight of civilization is something we will discuss more and more in the future, and we will and have to learn a lot.
A.G.I Will be man's last invention
the first AI was made in 1956 @@KnowL-oo5po
First video that I have seen on this subject. Excellent presentation with illuminating illustrations.
Thanks Rob!
Dude... how do you manage to make the map usage even more comprehensive?! Lol MDMAzing!!
Thanks Hotsky! Blood, tears and sweat is the answer 😂
The quality is so good you'll reach 1 million very fast as you deserve it 🥰
Good quality content. PLEASE KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK
Your video is informative, beautifully edited, and well informed about the challenges China faces concerning water volume and more significantly, pollution levels. I have been to China many times, my wife and daughter are Chinese citizens from northern China.
Pollution levels and water quality in China are both atrocious. Seeing first hand how the Chinese government operates, I would say that China will do the barest of minimum to fight pollution, water quality and climate change. By minimum I mean little more than what it takes to make sure it's work force doesn't die in large quantities. I use the term work force, rather than population, because ultimately that's all the Chinese government cares about.
Your video is 20 years late, and you know how much China can do in 20 years.
Water consumption is greatest in Industrial Processes; while population was a strong second place. The fact that industrial economies allowed a greater population does not change the way Industry used water.
And that is true in India too. Look at the dying of textiles or the making of silk. Where did China's economy grow first? Textiles, carpets, clothing, home goods, footwear, toys, basic tools and housewares, plastics and metals. Large quantities of cheap products from Tee shirts to underwear and socks to jeans and coats, light bulbs, nails and wire and nuts and bolts (fasteners) hand tools. Those were the explosive areas of manufacturing growth in the 1970's replacing American basic goods manufacturing.
If the Caspian Sea were connected to the Black Sea by a canal (e.g. a canal from the mouth of the Don at the Sea of Azov to the coast of the Caspian Sea near Artezian), the Caspian Sea would fill up again to sea level. The Caspian Sea would also increase in area and thus more water would evaporate. The result would be more precipitation around the Caspian Sea, especially west of it. The effect would probably extend to northwest China.
VERY well done this time man, fantastic visuals
Thank you Cameron!
Search " End of Juan Guaidó: US-appointed Venezuelan coup leader ousted by ex allies " on yT.
Mike Pompeo was correct " We lied, We cheated, We stole "
Lol you got skemthing here bro very nice and never watched your videos before
In 2021, only 40% of Chinese had access to tap water? where did you get this data??? I mean: China will get a coverage of 87% in rural areas( data from China govement ), and in cities ,this data is almost 100%...
Anyway, Fresh water resources are indeed a problem that the Chinese government has been facing, but things are far from as serious as this video says. The period when China’s water pollution was the worst and the era when China was most water-scarce has long passed
Well-done video, but the comparison with EU and US is apples to oranges. China uses vastly more coal (thus more river transport) and Western countries rely more on gas and oil (pipelines). In general you can't really look at the use of ships versus trains versus trucks without looking at the value of the goods. China consumes huge amounts of raw materials and imported soya and grains (all bulk goods, hence ship transport where possible).
Sure, China can teach India and Bangladesh about inland waterways, by reducing their access to fresh water.
First off wanted to say really appreciate the time put into research this video, this is the first time I have heard of that 2-1-2-18 network, and it gave a good basis for understanding the Chinese internal waterways of China.
However I wanted question the last part of the video, with the heavy focus on internal waterway freight transport. Despite an almost double rate of use of Chinese internal waterways than their EU and US equivalence the rate is still rather small (only 7%), and despite the mode of transport being far cheaper than train and road (by Cost/tonnes-km) it seems it is still less relied on. It would be interesting to go further into the reasoning why it is rather unused or unreliable if you do a future video perhaps on the transport infrastructure (rails and roads of china) and why they are more heavily relied on for transportation.
someone really needs to stick this video in the faces of all those peter zeihan fanboys who think only the US has navigable waterways.
@@hughmungus2760 I think it is more so the size of the watershed, and location of watershed given to other locations like cities and bodies of water. (Data from Wikipedia)
For example China's largest river basins Yangtze, Yellow River, and Pearl River combined amount to 3 million km2 while just the Mississippi-Missouri River Basin is 3.2 million km2, and that's without the additions of the other river watersheds in US shared with Canada and Mexico (St Lawrence, Snake River, and Colorado). Also I think the interoperability of the waterways between the Pacific and Atlantic is also exploitable by US.
The other 2 countries that seems to have a large river basin are Brazil and India. I would venture to say the reason Brazil's is hard to exploit is the inhospitability of the Amazon forest and vast distance between their watershed and the major cities Sao Paolo and Rio de Janeiro on the other side of Brazil, but I could be wrong. And for India I have no idea.
Good content, but the rotating maps add a level of distraction that is not needed. Otherwise, excellent.
This guy content is immaculate
They already dammed the dam out of the dam. They don’t have damm problem now. I mean water.
😂
Awesome stuff. Learned a lot today.
Thank you so much
Most of the world faces droughts, famines., and flooding.
Because of incompetence and greeed!
I live in a country where people drink tap water. How many Chinese drink tap water? None, I would assume. That makes a huge difference.
💯 actually that’s a pretty interesting question. For anyone living in mainland China reading this comment, do you normally drink tap water?
@@Kamome163 All the Chinese people I have ever met asked me if tap water was drinkable and were surprised when I said it is safe to drink. As far as I know Chinese people only drink bottled water but of course direct feedback is needed.
@@golDroger88中国人只喝自来水
Great explainer, well done
I really like the music in the last ten seconds of this video. Could you tell me the name of this song?
China doesn't have a water resource scarcity, they have a water distribution and recycling problem that can certainly be resolved.
Considering we live on a water world, the total water usage of all human activity (2,640 mi³ = 11,004,000,480,000,000 (q L) Quadrillion Litres) is an insignificant, tiny fraction of a single percent of all the water in, on and falling to the surface from space. And the vast majority of this water is cycled back into the environment. It is "conservatively" estimated that the Earth has ~325, 000, 000 mi³ (cubic miles) of water or 1.355 sextillion litres.
Let this sink in (pun):
There are 1,101,117,130,711.3 (trillion) Gallons (U.S.) in a cubic mile or 4,404,468,522,845.2 (trillion) litres.
1 mi³ = 4,168,182,000,000 trillion L
Roughly 118,000 mi³ or 495,000 km³ of water is cycled through the atmosphere every year.
China, India and the USA consumed the highest annual totals: 289 mi³, 283 mi³ and 252 mi³ respectively, followed by Brazil at 115 mi³.
Out of approximately 3,250,000 mi³ of fresh water on the planet, It is estimated that the current level of human freshwater consumption is about 4,370 km³ or close to 1,050 mi³ per year.
Even in arid regions water exists in many forms which can be harvested. As an example, By using moisture harvesters with high surface area, porous structure, water affinity, fast vapor diffusion, and molecular diffusion, the water vapor in atmosphere can be collected as freshwater. The moisture-harvesting materials could be MOF-based materials, hygroscopic materials, and polymeric gels.
There are approximately 16,000 operational desalination plants, located across 177 countries, which generate an estimated 95 million m3/day (22 mi³) of fresh water. Micro desalination plants operate near almost every natural gas or fracking facility in the United States. Furthermore, micro desalination facilities exist in textile, leather, food industries, etc.
Pre pandemic, they were building 2 coal based power plants per months. If they don’t clean up their pollution problems, in 10 years they will have to deal with a huge health issue with their population
I have no idea how you do these stunning 3D sceneries with the camera moving around like a drone
I’ve been saying this for years “let’s protect our water”
Like in all large nations, the people are expendable. In this case, they also contain water.
Another top notch quality video
"China boasts the largest navigable waterways network on Earth", isn't the US the first? I think I heard this information in this channel too. You are talking about extension or area?
Subscribed 👍👍
These are some awesome graphics.
To give another perspective on why Water is a weakness. You see, the great Pm of Singapore said Air Conditioning was the greatest invention ever. And you know air conditioning requires lots of water, and thats for a country the size of Singapore, a drop in the ocean. There are probably 100x societies the size of singapore in china and they are consumer socieitys. outside that, we have producer societies which which produce our food, etc. and things like this. I am always praying for the best outcome for all.
Great point! Expanding on LKY and Singapore’s reliance of water, in his memories LKY said that Malaysia was Singapore main existential threat as without its water, Singapore would’ve survived three days.
super work bro