The Great Man-Made River: The Eighth Wonder of the World?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/Megaprojects to get 50% off your first Keeps order.
    Got a beard? Good. I've got something for you: beardblaze.com
    Simon's Social Media:
    Twitter: / simonwhistler
    Instagram: / simonwhistler
    This video is #sponsored by Keeps.
    Love content? Check out Simon's other CZcams Channels:
    Biographics: / @biographics
    Geographics: / @geographicstravel
    Warographics: / @warographics643
    SideProjects: / @sideprojects
    Into The Shadows: / intotheshadows
    TopTenz: / toptenznet
    Today I Found Out: / todayifoundout
    Highlight History: / @highlighthistory
    Business Blaze: / @brainblaze6526
    Casual Criminalist: / thecasualcriminalist
    Decoding the Unknown: / @decodingtheunknown2373

Komentáře • 486

  • @megaprojects9649
    @megaprojects9649  Před rokem +28

    Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/Megaprojects to get 50% off your first Keeps order.

    • @Jan12700
      @Jan12700 Před rokem +8

      1:07 Skip

    • @michaelmayhem350
      @michaelmayhem350 Před rokem

      Simon we need DTU March 8 1994 Michigan Please make it happen

    • @michaelmayhem350
      @michaelmayhem350 Před rokem +2

      @@Jan12700 lol I always skip the first minute or two of all Simon's videos

    • @sparky6086
      @sparky6086 Před rokem

      Thanks Hillary!!!

    • @KarsonNow
      @KarsonNow Před rokem

      We have here the same problem with the water supply of Crimea thru North Crimean Canal - 2014
      Ukraine shut down the canal in 2014 soon after the Russian annexation of Crimea. Was ist not an act of terrorism to cut water supply for few millions people off?

  • @letsgocamping88
    @letsgocamping88 Před rokem +411

    Hey man, you didn't lose your hair, it just got strategically re deployed

    • @cthomas3782
      @cthomas3782 Před rokem +9

      He’s not Russian haha

    • @keinaanabdi6821
      @keinaanabdi6821 Před rokem +3

      It seems like that 😂

    • @cann5565
      @cann5565 Před rokem +7

      I'm just imagining where to and it's not pretty.

    • @johnsoncityaerialphotograp7201
      @johnsoncityaerialphotograp7201 Před rokem +5

      But does the carpet match the drapes?? 😆

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Před rokem +4

      @@cthomas3782 "strategic redeployment" is a military term. Russia isn't the only nation with a military.
      Jokes tend to be funnier when they're well researched. They also work better when the premise actually aligns with reality. Stick to mowing lawns.

  • @tonymcgurk5411
    @tonymcgurk5411 Před rokem +95

    I went to Libya on business a number of times there was one big issue you missed and that was the water was so laden with minerals it stripped the concrete and caused major leaks they had to steel line the pipes to stop them degrading.

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Před rokem +1

      Omg

    • @vanpenguin22
      @vanpenguin22 Před rokem +4

      Where I live,
      The local water supply is the constantly replenished watersheds formed by vast lakes in the Cascade Mountain range which is already damn near as pure as bottled water, but for varying amounts of brown silt picked up along the way, and calcium.
      I can't believe the amount of calcium!
      AKA, scale.
      One micron filters don't trap it.

    • @Raz.C
      @Raz.C Před rokem +1

      Freaky!
      Does that mean that they had very hard water (ie- large concentration of group 1 and 2 ions), or was this an entirely different issue?
      I've seen some images of ancient Roman Aqueducts that were transporting such vast amounts of such hard water, that there was almost 1 meter of particulates built up, over the aqueduct lining!!

  • @arefinhoosain654
    @arefinhoosain654 Před 8 měsíci +7

    Thanks to you for remembering the contribution of Muambur Gaddafi on grate man made river.

  • @tomcole5838
    @tomcole5838 Před rokem +101

    Learning new things. 58 years old and never heard that story. Awesome! Thanks Megaprojects.

    • @amacca2085
      @amacca2085 Před rokem +2

      He did a lot for Libya search on CZcams what he did for the people

    • @MrSimonw58
      @MrSimonw58 Před rokem

      You knew Gadhafi enjoyed laying pipe

    • @RobertDooley-sl7cp
      @RobertDooley-sl7cp Před rokem +5

      It's sad, the US wouldn't show us anything good about Libya because Gadhafi refused to sell his oil rights. He actually did good things but was painted as a villian.

  • @reggiep75
    @reggiep75 Před rokem +47

    Finally, been waiting for this to drop as I mentioned it long ago. Gaddafi was a smart man by making people capable of farming their own land and it annoyed characters in the West.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Před rokem +18

      Always wondered why the Gaddafi hatred in the west. I'm in the US. Patriotic, vote all the time. But always do my reading of world events, and really Gaddafi accomplished a lot of things that genuinely promoted the well being of the Libyan people. He even aided western people who were trying to rescue their relatives from pirates, when our own government did nothing. So I don't know. Maybe the news we heard wasn't true, made up by senators with their own agenda. Maybe it was true and he was a dick. But it sure seems like Libya is in better shape now than it was before.

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem +9

      @@Hollylivengood Gaddafi was a monster, like most dictators. He was also a very shrewd politician and had an eye for the populist things to do, some of which were indeed very good for the people of Libya, he was willing to "bestow his largess" on the public. Much in the same style as Castro in Cuba.
      However, when things weren't going his way, that's when you saw his true character. And it was the same as every other dictator, a ruthless willingness to hold onto power at any cost to his people. No-one who supresses dissenting voices with violence and terror is a good person.
      Edit: The fact that he started to say "no" to the US certainly didn't help relations there either, and undoubtably played more of a part in the US deciding to stop ignoring his other behaviour. Unfortunately the west does have a tendency to ignore dictator's bad habits against their own population if they're "useful monsters".

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Před rokem

      @@Ylyrra Ahh, I wondered. Are you from Libya? Always wondered what the real story was there. But you can't get it unless you find someone who lives there. Hope things are better now.

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem +5

      @@Hollylivengood No, UK, but being outside the US and given the UK's... interesting relationship with Libya, we've historically had a mix of more nuanced reporting than just "Gaddafi bad" especially given the number of British contractors there were on the ground at various points, seeing the stuff being built. And certainly a more critical level of reporting on our county's complicity in various things that went on.

    • @StoneInMySandal
      @StoneInMySandal Před rokem +9

      @@Hollylivengood As dictators go, Gaddafi was one of the best that ever existed. But he was still a dictator and he maintained his position by sowing discord among the various tribes and brutally repressing revolutionary forces. But that’s pretty normal African politics.
      Gaddafi became an enemy of the west because he directly meddled in regional and global politics, supported communist regimes, funded terrorism in Europe and the US, supported civil rights activists in the US and South Africa, destabilized the nuclear weapons balance of power, and, probably more than anything, was staunchly and militantly anti-Zionist.
      Everybody was afraid of him, and rightly so. He was absurdly wealthy, giving him the ability to act without the financial intervention of western powers and he was not concerned with how the world perceived him. Basically everything that western nations hate for anyone else to do and be.

  • @terryenby2304
    @terryenby2304 Před rokem +65

    This was way more interesting than I first thought! Thanks everyone!

  • @randybentley2633
    @randybentley2633 Před rokem +13

    I live in the foothills of upstate South Carolina, and as such, the water is plentiful and naturally clean. I know, and am thankful, every day, that such is the case.

  • @danielreuben1058
    @danielreuben1058 Před rokem +40

    What an amazing feat by humans. I can not fathom the amount of people coordinating different plans, and ideas, to build something of this magnitude.

    • @florians9949
      @florians9949 Před rokem +5

      And all it took us was less than 10 years to ruin everything.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Před rokem +1

      Dude, leave the "get it" out next time. The joke was golden if you had. Don't cater to the lowest common denominator. If they need it explained, they aren't worth the wasted breath.

    • @danielreuben1058
      @danielreuben1058 Před rokem +2

      @@SkunkApe407 received and updated. Thank you.

    • @disposabull
      @disposabull Před rokem

      @@florians9949 For all the hate Gaddafi got in the west he was probably the best dictator of the 20th century.
      Most would have stolen every penny for themselves instead of building projects like this and providing the Libyan people with the best standard of living in Africa.
      Hillary Clinton can be thanked for the current ruin of Libya, Gaddafi tried to normalise relations, stopped spending money on the military and got killed for his efforts.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 Před rokem +1

      @@danielreuben1058 nice. Intellectual humor is the best. You can suss out the blockheads with a witty comment like yours.

  • @billwilson3609
    @billwilson3609 Před rokem +6

    It sounds like the water in the aquifer can migrate to the massive wells as that area is pumped out. There's a few aquifers in Texas that small cities and rural water districts will tap during the dry Summer months then switch over to obtaining water from local reservoirs during the wet months in the Fall thru the Spring while the aquifer levels rise from migrating water and being recharged by surface water percolating down into the formation.

  • @bocadelcieloplaya3852
    @bocadelcieloplaya3852 Před rokem +16

    thanks for finally covering this topic. Interesting tnhat the oil money was used to build useful infrastructure and not just palaces and weapons.

    • @buttsexandbananapeels
      @buttsexandbananapeels Před rokem +2

      Or corrupt governments. Mer’ca.

    • @duncanb1981
      @duncanb1981 Před rokem +1

      Or Superyachts, Villas and hookers.

    • @Ylyrra
      @Ylyrra Před rokem +4

      He did all three. There were plenty of weapons and palaces too.

    • @jeebusk
      @jeebusk Před rokem +1

      He wasn't as bad as many others.

  • @gladlawson61
    @gladlawson61 Před rokem +30

    Do an episode on all the snake oils to keep your hair.

    • @Sol-Invictus
      @Sol-Invictus Před rokem

      Well keeps is tested but it's and lists side effects. Losing your hair? Shave it, give up. Unless your Elon Musk, but that hair could have cost tens of millions he doesn't even mention being bald decades ago! PayPal looking like Al Bundy selling shoes.

  • @Kellen6795
    @Kellen6795 Před rokem +23

    Despite all the failings of the Ghadafi government. They did get one thing right. They knew what was needed to create greater prosperity in the country, they planned it, they built it, and they actually used it to help their people

    • @pineapplesareyummy6352
      @pineapplesareyummy6352 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Failings? Gaddafi didn't fail - he succeeded. Under Gaddafi, Libya was literally the richest country in Africa. Gaddafi provided his citizens with free housing, healthcare and education, paid for by the country's energy wealth. Where other African leaders looted their country and sent it to Western bank accounts, Gaddafi wasn't corrupt. He vastly improved the lives of his people. In 2011, Libya's GDP per capita was almost equal to that of a Western country. After the civil war sponsored by NATO, and Gaddafi's murder, Libya's GDP per capita collapsed by 80%. The West destroyed a country, destroyed its infrastructure, and Libya may never be put together again.

    • @suehussain1230
      @suehussain1230 Před 2 měsíci

      The COLONIAL WEST cannot see the NON WHITE stand on their own feet

    • @mrwhosmynameagain
      @mrwhosmynameagain Před 2 měsíci

      Failings? Lol you'd think exactly that if you were a brainwashed sheep who only gets information from billionaire funded mainstream media.

  • @KirtFitzpatrick
    @KirtFitzpatrick Před rokem +35

    If the original 4000 year estimates were based on water consumption data prior to the irrigation project when water was scarce, I would believe that the post water pipeline estimates for the lifespan of the aquifer might be less than 100 years and maybe even less than 60. If they're all of a sudden irrigating the desert for agriculture their water usage can easily increase 40x. (For those bad at math, 4000 years / 40 = 100)

    • @mspicer3262
      @mspicer3262 Před rokem +12

      It reminds me of the Aral Sea... the Soviets dried it up for cotton farming...

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Před rokem +3

      I'm sure they were smart enough to make this a reality but not smart enough to calculate water consumption correctly.

    • @jiridrapal7512
      @jiridrapal7512 Před rokem

      they are not irrigating anything. The civil war stirred up by west destroyed 4/5 of the water supply.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před rokem

      Draining a finite amount of water so you can water the desert is so laughably short sighted it would be hilarious if it weren't depressing. At least with oil you use most of what you dig up and 90% doesn't just evaporate without being utilized

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Před rokem +1

      @@bradsanders407 they almost certainly know, they just have zero reason to care. Politicians rarely look past the end of their term, for democracies that means the next election and for dictators it's the end of their life, but both are relatively short. If exploiting those resources gain them benefits for 10-20 years they're happy and if it crashes and burns after that they don't care because they got what they wanted.

  • @centredoorplugsthornton4112

    Do a story about Libya's railway, work on which stopped early in 2011.

    • @elperrodelautumo7511
      @elperrodelautumo7511 Před rokem +7

      Libya had a better living standard of all of Africa until 2011.

    • @arnoldschwarzennegger6534
      @arnoldschwarzennegger6534 Před rokem +2

      @@elperrodelautumo7511 But at least the Libyans have a taste of freedom and democracy under a tattered and destabilised country run by warlords.

  • @interistacro5892
    @interistacro5892 Před rokem +6

    Libya before 'democracy'.
    Rest in peace, great man 🟩🟩

  • @AlonzoRodrigoEzcurraSilva

    When I read about the Great Man-Made River, I was thinking about the Yunhe River in China, built from Hangzhou to Beijing (1776km) around year 1000, but I guess the one in Libya could also apply...

  • @nige1955
    @nige1955 Před rokem +19

    Amazing HUGE project. I worked on it in 2010 until the Ghadaffi thing.

    • @EldyPlaysMinecraft
      @EldyPlaysMinecraft Před rokem +7

      Oh yeah. That whole Ghadaffi thing.

    • @johnowens8992
      @johnowens8992 Před rokem +4

      Where he sold oil for something other than Dollars

    • @serjherman
      @serjherman Před rokem +3

      You mean, until the NATO and UN murdered him and his sons and completely destroyed prosperous Libya and turned it into a hellish nightmare with open slave trade. That Gaddafi thing, right?

  • @coolnegative
    @coolnegative Před rokem +17

    Just imagine the sinkhole that's gonna happen when that aquifer is finally emptied!

    • @sydhenderson6753
      @sydhenderson6753 Před rokem +5

      You mean the ninth wonder of the world!

    • @coolnegative
      @coolnegative Před rokem

      @@sydhenderson6753 😆👍yup!

    • @ranjusranjus143
      @ranjusranjus143 Před rokem

      There will be no sink hole. Instead a whole region will gradually sink over the course of several years

    • @coolnegative
      @coolnegative Před rokem +1

      @@ranjusranjus143 yeah, I was more or less joking around, but technically, it would still be a sink whole........just on a massive scale!🤣👍Thanx for the reply!

    • @ranjusranjus143
      @ranjusranjus143 Před rokem

      @coolnegative yes...like that happening in Mexico City. The city has sunk about two inches over ? 2 decades

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C Před rokem +4

    re - Area of Sahara Desert vs Area of USA
    WOW!!! I had no idea that they were so close!! When you include Alaska, the USA covers more area than the Sahara. However, the Sahara Desert covers MORE area than the contiguous USA, making the size comparison VERY apt. Well done to the _Metaphors, Comparisons and 18th Century-French-Improv-Poetry_ section of the Scriptwriting team!!👌👌👍👍

  • @joarvat
    @joarvat Před rokem +7

    Ghadaffi actually did a lot of good things and made Libya the best country in Africa. Then the west decided to remove him. Was it because he would not use the petrodollar? He had his dark sides as well.

  • @Raz.C
    @Raz.C Před rokem +21

    Did you guys know...
    There's so much sand in Northern Africa, that if you were to spread it all out, it would completely cover the Sahara Desert?!!?
    Ps: That joke is now more than 30 years old (I heard it/ read it back inna 90s and never forgotten it), but it still makes me laugh every time I think of it. Not just smile, but laugh! Not just chuckle-laugh, but full, belly-laugh! Not just full, belly-laugh, but... Nope, I've got nothing else. But I still love that joke! So much sand...

    • @Demonic_Tang
      @Demonic_Tang Před rokem +7

      Every 60 seconds, a minute passes in Africa

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Před rokem

      I see you are a writer for the Daily Show

    • @TTFerdinand
      @TTFerdinand Před rokem

      The bad news is that the sand in Sahara Desert is pretty much useless but the good news is that there's plenty of it.

    • @billwilson3609
      @billwilson3609 Před rokem +2

      Here's a true fun fact! Mexico is so mountainous that it would cover Asia if ironed flat.

    • @Raz.C
      @Raz.C Před rokem +2

      @@billwilson3609
      It SEEMS like a "fun fact," but in reality, it poses more questions than it presents a satisfying answer. I mean, my first response would be - What if we ironed Asia flat? Surely the Himalaya region alone would 'flatten out' to reveal a vast area. And also - What if we ironed them both flat? How much area would Mexico NOW cover of both flat areas? And, of course, my next question HAS to be - On what calculations and/ or presumptions are such suppositions to be made? And so on and so forth...
      Anyway, that leads me to a tangential question next, which is "Is neurosis _Fun?_ If so, how much fun is it to be neurotic vs how neurotic do you have to be before finding it fun?

  • @winconfig
    @winconfig Před rokem +11

    Wendover made an awesome and informative video about this, also. Highly suggest all to watch when done with this video!

    • @pilirin_
      @pilirin_ Před rokem +3

      they should probably be informed about this, because several lines from this video were directly plagiarized from that one

    • @dumass7fifty
      @dumass7fifty Před rokem +2

      Real Life Lore released one about 2 weeks ago, have noticed this happen before some of the creators seem to be borrowing ideas for videos from each other

    • @Marius57208
      @Marius57208 Před rokem +1

      I too was realy anoyed that megaprojects stopped to even try to hide, that they copy other people thoughts on topics, and even lines from other people videos

  • @beenaturalinc
    @beenaturalinc Před rokem +6

    That was new information for me. Always something new around the corner that scares the hell out of me. Thanks, though!

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před rokem +6

    2:45 - Chapter 1 - Desert treasure
    5:20 - Chapter 2 - Gaddafi's great plan
    10:20 - Chapter 3 - The future of the oasis

  • @keithlewis1881
    @keithlewis1881 Před rokem +2

    The tube wells were dug by Brasilero and if I remember correctly the huge pipe were made by Dongwha.

  • @martinstallard2742
    @martinstallard2742 Před rokem +20

    2:42 desert treasure
    5:17 Gaddafi's great plan
    10:16 the future of the oasis

  • @stephencummins7589
    @stephencummins7589 Před rokem

    Fascinating presentation

  • @mikespeedyfpv321
    @mikespeedyfpv321 Před rokem +2

    Hi that was a Amazing. Great work.

  • @Blackielude91
    @Blackielude91 Před rokem +5

    This is super cool! Any idea if this super old water needs to be treated after being pumped, or is brought up clean enough to drink?

  • @bradbrandon2506
    @bradbrandon2506 Před rokem +3

    Now I really want to go see this thing. It sounds amazing.

    • @serjherman
      @serjherman Před rokem

      It was destroyed by the US, NATO and UN

    • @Mossad901
      @Mossad901 Před 3 měsíci

      NATO bombed it in 2011. It’s operating at 10 % capacity

  • @JohnnyAFG81
    @JohnnyAFG81 Před rokem +8

    Imagine wars being fought for a simple drink of water.

    • @robertewalt7789
      @robertewalt7789 Před rokem +2

      We’re going to be seeing more and more such wars.

  • @jasonlib1996
    @jasonlib1996 Před rokem +8

    Its always the case that when the west involves itself in national politics, the country always ends up worse off.
    Whilst Gaddafi was a dictator, the country saw incredible growth and long-term projects that would be ignored by short term focused politicians.
    However as soon as the west got involved the country went down hill, and has been in disarray and disrepair ever since due to a lack of unified governance and investment

    • @TheBooban
      @TheBooban Před rokem +1

      Its not always the case and that guy caused alot of damage in the past and bombed an airplane. He had it coming.

    • @jasonlib1996
      @jasonlib1996 Před rokem

      @@TheBooban Okay, name one country in the last 50 years that has ended up better off after western nations got involved?
      Iraq? worse off, Afghanistan? worse off, libya, Somalia? Syria?
      Every country where we in the west launch military operations just ends with the destruction of much of the country, the population worse off, and a government that is worse than what was ousted.
      he bombed a plane... so we destroyed the country and caused untold turmoil for decades.

    • @mryuk1621
      @mryuk1621 Před rokem

      @@TheBooban not always as in what country ?

    • @dumpeeplarfunny
      @dumpeeplarfunny Před rokem

      Or you're racist.

  • @ribbitgoesthedoglastnamehe4681

    There is an equally impressive water system that was originally started by the ancient sumerians or akkadians and was continued to be expanded to almost modern times. It didnt of course carry as much water, but was dug underground originally with bronze tools.

  • @patrickwentz8413
    @patrickwentz8413 Před rokem +19

    Wow. Libya must be a rich and peaceful country with all this fresh water.

    • @mikesemus9773
      @mikesemus9773 Před rokem +16

      it was until he said he'd sell his Gas for Gold or Euro's instead of the Dollar, a month later he was dead and the country a hellscape.

    • @idonhaveanyideawhattocallm1472
      @idonhaveanyideawhattocallm1472 Před rokem

      @@mikesemus9773 the CIA when they hear about a third world country with a possibility of developing

    • @mikesemus9773
      @mikesemus9773 Před rokem

      @@idonhaveanyideawhattocallm1472 Yeah, no kidding, US has no problem ruining the lives of people all around the world for money and power. This was particularly shocking as Gadhafi was renting his Libyan torture chambers to CIA to rendition "terror suspects" in clear violation of multiple international laws. Just goes to show even if you do everything the US wants, 1 decision they don't like and they will have you killed and your country destroyed.
      Coincidence that Libya was one of the major gas suppliers to the EU market and every other "Arab Spring" miraculously happened in countries that were supplying the EU or had pipelines for Countries that were? No, i was being sarcastic, ofc it wasn't coincidence, it's quite literally criminal on a gargantuan scale.

    • @RamzyMulla
      @RamzyMulla Před 9 měsíci +1

      All Thanks To the United States that country doesn’t know any peace .. smh Obama

  • @Mrgunsngear
    @Mrgunsngear Před rokem +1

    Thanks

  • @CardinalBiggles01
    @CardinalBiggles01 Před rokem +6

    I was in Libya in 2009 for work. Whatever else Gaddafi might have been, the country was prosperous, the people seemed happy (for the most part) and he spent a lot of the country's wealth on it's people. It was sure as shit better than it is now.
    "We came, we saw, he died. Hahahaha".

  • @Prosper_Dean
    @Prosper_Dean Před rokem +9

    RIP Gaddafi

  • @gary6549
    @gary6549 Před rokem +2

    My uncle actually worked there on the oil pumps. He is irish.

  • @Dunkskins
    @Dunkskins Před rokem +13

    Lets not forget that Gadhafi was wanting to unite Africa, create the same style system as the EU but an african version.
    He also wanted to kick out the West taking the resources out of Africa and for every country to Nationalize their resources, but ya know he needed some freedom dropped on him.

    • @cozakokotano6448
      @cozakokotano6448 Před 9 měsíci +1

      They took out one gadaffi, they created millions of gadaffis.

  • @kevinrasmussen1748
    @kevinrasmussen1748 Před rokem +1

    I think I saw a video about this just... a few weeks ago... ideas sure get circulated. :D

  • @caelum2185
    @caelum2185 Před rokem +2

    Do one on India’s first indigenous aircraft carrier INS VIKRANT.

  • @zaco-km3su
    @zaco-km3su Před rokem +4

    This is a marvel. Gaddafi did something good. It's worth saying that there's no 2nd Libyan civil war. It's the same civil war.

  • @oldsoldier4209
    @oldsoldier4209 Před rokem +2

    You did a great job for the sponsor, Simon. But, I have to wonder about the thought process of their advertising department. "This product will stop and/or reverse hair loss. We'll make millions if we can sell it!" "I know, we'll get a bald guy that it absolutely CAN NOT HELP to talk about it!" 🤔

  • @cliffwoodbury5319
    @cliffwoodbury5319 Před rokem +6

    This is interesting but the river project i can't wait to see is a proposal by China to build a man made rover that will go from the Himalayas to the western border of China as they try to turn western China into California. But in this project they need to connect the eastern and western systems further down south and they should actually have some of the water on the surface (heavily vegetated grounds under water) for the fishing/agriculture industry and real estate industry witch could bring many tourist to the deep desert..

  • @lonniehowell2360
    @lonniehowell2360 Před rokem +1

    Water is a renewable resource if handled properly. I'd like to know what they are doing with all that wastewater? Treatment plants, then reinjecting it back into the aquifers? Purification plants to directly reuse? Or just dumping it on the ground after use?
    And before you start grousing at me, I hold a class I Ohio EPA license (inactive due to disability)

  • @jm-ib7tb
    @jm-ib7tb Před rokem +4

    If they use all the water, would there be sinkholes? I mean that's a lot of stuff taken out.

  • @steveblomefield9513
    @steveblomefield9513 Před rokem +1

    superb Simon. top of the docuz. solar and desalination will solve depletion of fossil water.

  • @johnrichards244
    @johnrichards244 Před rokem +3

    This is smelling a lot like a certain sea that is disappearing. You have done a video on it

  • @markrix
    @markrix Před rokem +2

    So... Wut happens once the water is gone?
    Gaddafi must have needed all that water to wash off the blood from his murders

  • @springbok4015
    @springbok4015 Před rokem +4

    Aquifer or aquifier? I think it’s the former.

    • @nightwishlover8913
      @nightwishlover8913 Před rokem +1

      So do most of us - but apparently not Simon - d'oh!

    • @eitanamir7918
      @eitanamir7918 Před rokem +1

      At times like this I'm reminded that Simon's reading a script and doesn't always know what he's talking about

  • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988

    this puts fossil resources into a much better light, very interesting.
    i wonder how this much water released into the oceans after use or to the atmosphere through drying up influences the climate, i also wonder how much fossil water is mined worldwide. assuming this last for longer than 100 years, this would be amazing for the future of northern africa, if not, it's still an amazing boon for the libyan people.

  • @thesilentone4024
    @thesilentone4024 Před rokem +5

    Can you talk about the biggest man made projects all across the world citys and there effects on the environment around them and inside them.

  • @flannelshirtdad
    @flannelshirtdad Před rokem +28

    "A victory of man over mother nature " always ends with mother nature winning.

    • @cjwrench07
      @cjwrench07 Před rokem

      Kinda. All of human civilization is a testament to a series of victory of man over Mother Nature, but she usually wins by default through our greed.
      The current war in Ukraine shows how easily new found resources lead to war. Ukraine found massive natural gas reserves along her southern coast and just west of the Dnipro river. The reserves were so large, and easily accessible, that they could take over 1/4th to 1/3rd of the EU’s entire needs. That would cost Moscow around *HALF* her oil/gas income (~$1Bil USD/day) and Norway about 1/4th their gas exports (~$100mil/day) to the EU and beyond. With *Everyone needing to* cut off gas use after 2035, it would basically ruin the current Norwegian & Russian long term plans to stop being PetroEconomies by then.

    • @alstonofalltrades3142
      @alstonofalltrades3142 Před rokem +1

      I used to worry about all the waste we produce hear on earth and still do for ourselves at least. After watching what a solar flare can do in the film Knowing, all this crap and pollution we make along with everything else can be recycled in a single moment.

    • @bradsanders407
      @bradsanders407 Před rokem +1

      Then how did we cross oceans and fly airplanes? How are we at the top of the food chain? Seems like there's some Ws in there.

    • @Not_a_Lizard_
      @Not_a_Lizard_ Před rokem +1

      How so? We have done nothing but constantly surpass our limitations for the last 200 years. And even most of our issues are of our own creation. Mother Nature is barely an afterthought these days.

    • @alstonofalltrades3142
      @alstonofalltrades3142 Před rokem

      @@bradsanders407 I love tha 'we' stuff, i used to say it too. Look at all the wonders 'we' discover on nature docs. look at all the innovations inventions and breakthroughs 'we' make in science and enginneering.
      One day i thought, ive never done any of these things never known anyone personally who has. We can take instructions to various levels to manage a shop. build a wall or upgrade some IT. ect ect. Basically implement what the cream of the crop does. I still enjoy watching things like Brian Cox, Mr attenborough and other awesome presenters. But the 'we' in me is gone.

  • @teeess9551
    @teeess9551 Před rokem

    Aquafire? Is that like fire water? A huuuuge underground liquor reservoir? Wicked!

  • @rh661
    @rh661 Před rokem +1

    A few ideas ...
    Eifel Tower
    Statue of Liberty
    St Louis Arch
    United States Constitution
    ... and I still want a deep dive into Operation Paperclip

  • @GustavSvard
    @GustavSvard Před rokem +1

    Still no video on the unbuilt Russian/Soviet plan to re-direct two (west) Siberian rivers to the Aral Sea? Come on, it's a most awesome unbuilt river project ever :)
    All that added inflow of water wouldn't just top up the Aral Sea to its old levels, it might even lift it so high that it gets an outflow (into the Caspian, thus raising that sea as well). I have yet to find any actual study on how much water would be redirected though, so the actual increased water for the Aral Sea seems to be unknown?

  • @JoeBeaudette
    @JoeBeaudette Před rokem +7

    I felt triggered and personally attacked every time you said “aquifire”

    • @bobkerolls13
      @bobkerolls13 Před rokem +1

      I can never tell when if he's mispronouncing something, or if it's just the usual British insistence on adding hard vowel sounds where there isn't even a vowel.

    • @JoeBeaudette
      @JoeBeaudette Před rokem +3

      @@bobkerolls13 or maybe he’s smart and he knows if he mispronounces just one word throughout the whole video it’ll spur massive engagement in the comment section 😂

    • @annalieff-saxby568
      @annalieff-saxby568 Před rokem +1

      I also feel the pain!

  • @sreekardugyala2118
    @sreekardugyala2118 Před rokem

    Hey @Megaprojects rethink about largest lift irrigation river project. I guess it’s not great man made river. But Kaleshwaram lift irrigation project in Telangana India.

  • @benheisen2135
    @benheisen2135 Před rokem

    You should look at the FM diversion project.

  • @sprwil
    @sprwil Před rokem

    Thank you!

  • @MrNeptunebob
    @MrNeptunebob Před rokem +6

    All of these problems are exacerbated by population. Please do a Megaprojects about birth control, the story of how we got The Pill.

    • @TheBooban
      @TheBooban Před rokem

      What “we”? Women got it.
      We got another one that I haven’t tried yet. I’ve tried horny goat weed though. Think it works?

  • @thetigerking2613
    @thetigerking2613 Před rokem +2

    Suppressed its able to remain functioning during the civil war.

  • @XDSDDLord
    @XDSDDLord Před rokem

    When you pump out these water supplies, it tends to destabilize the ground too.

  • @perfectproducts01
    @perfectproducts01 Před rokem +1

    President Gaddafi was the man behind this mega project

  • @brianjennings7644
    @brianjennings7644 Před rokem

    In the middle of the Arizona desert, miles from anything but cacti and sand,
    you'll find Chain link gates, with "No Fishing" signs on them.

  • @mocmaniac1571
    @mocmaniac1571 Před rokem +2

    There is s small mistake, you changed the depth in ft but not in meters 160m both times. Loved the video anyways !

  • @romanregman1469
    @romanregman1469 Před rokem +2

    The fact that they have seemingly unlimited solar power and access to the sea (with all those goodies dissolved in it) makes it absolutely bonkers that they'd use the fossil water for anything other than specialty mineral water bottling.

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před rokem +1

      How much does desalinated water cost for 1000 gallons, vs the price for this fossil water for 1000 gallons?
      Plus what was the price per kiloWatt-hour, assuming it comes from Solar instead of on-location oil? Take into account the exchange rate for Libyan currency, not to mention United States and other nations not wanting to trade with Libya because Qaddafi was a dictator.

    • @romanregman1469
      @romanregman1469 Před rokem

      @@toddkes5890 Mirrors are far cheaper than photovoltaic panels. All needed is a plain water boiling plant

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před rokem

      @@romanregman1469 So how much does it cost for 1 million gallons of desalinated water using your method?
      Compare that how much does it cost for 1 million gallons of fresh water from this fossil source.

  • @simquicky3448
    @simquicky3448 Před rokem +1

    “AquaFire” 😂 Sounds like a confused Pokémon.
    Still love your work anyway mate 😝

    • @RodCurrie
      @RodCurrie Před rokem +1

      Say aquifier one more time

  • @ingemar_von_zweigbergk

    when all people around me look dead,
    it's nice to see a charming personality on youtube

  • @zbeasty
    @zbeasty Před rokem +2

    Australia needs to do a similar project and take water from the north of the country and run it through the centre then onto the eastern and western sea boards. A land mass almost equivalent to the continental US but with less than 1/10th the population yet the main cities are overpopulated and lack the water resources to expand further.

  • @hansmiseur3025
    @hansmiseur3025 Před rokem +1

    If this doesnt work out Nestle can always provide the water. For Only 100 times the price.

  • @Luke..luke..luke..
    @Luke..luke..luke.. Před rokem +4

    Didnt Real life lore literally make this exact video last week????

    • @kx4998
      @kx4998 Před rokem

      This type of video is likely written weeks ago.

  • @korpen2858
    @korpen2858 Před rokem +2

    I wonder if you could use the water to kick start a permanent ecosystem which would bind the sand make rain fall once more over the Sahara.

  • @justandy333
    @justandy333 Před rokem

    Thats great and all. Much respect to the engineers and workers who made this possible. But as eluded to, its not going to last forever.
    I refer you to a past case study: The Aral Sea. The Soviet Union managed to empty a whole sea in 40 years! Mainly due to mismanagement and greedy farmers, using it for the irrigation of crops. Its was plundered until it virtually disappeared and this was continually being fed into.
    The Fossil water under Lybia is not being replenished (to our knowledge).
    So its great now, but how long will this glut of water last?

  • @rolfjacobson833
    @rolfjacobson833 Před rokem

    thanks

  • @lawyermahaprasad
    @lawyermahaprasad Před rokem

    Looks like you decided to use Keeps in negative X axis my friend LOL

  • @stuartkcalvin
    @stuartkcalvin Před rokem

    I suspect that the Australian Great Artesian Basin is larger.
    Aquafire? Aquifer.

  • @Jamie-lw5sy
    @Jamie-lw5sy Před rokem

    I'm 52, thick full lush hair. Arthritis in both of my hands and elbows. A slipped disc. An occasional kidney stone. Quit crying, hair loss is no big deal. If you're going to get old you got to be tough. Toughen up tea drinker. Love your channel and narration by the way. Just kidding about the tea drinking. But seriously drink some damn coffee, and man up. 👍

  • @F_L_U_X
    @F_L_U_X Před rokem +1

    Didn't you do a video on this recently...or was it The InfoGraphics Show...or...RealLifeLore? Can't remember lol

  • @pilirin_
    @pilirin_ Před rokem +2

    there are several lines in this video which are just directly plagiarized from Real Life Lore's video on this topic which was released a month ago

  • @EddyChapman-nc6qf
    @EddyChapman-nc6qf Před 9 měsíci

    Arguably not the biggest irrigation project the Netherlands extended their coastline that's close, but the biggest and most ambitious project was by the Romans with their intricate system of aqueducts that are still partially in use to this day. This is not as impressive, not saying its not impressive I'd give it top 5 irrigation projects by humanity for sure haha

  • @davidvasquez6920
    @davidvasquez6920 Před rokem

    The best thing they did was not using canals but using pipes to prevent evaporation. Something the US has yet to do.

  • @SubvertTheState
    @SubvertTheState Před rokem +2

    Honestly if you have a beard the bald look is rather classy and hipster. You just don't have many other options if you want to look classy or hipster lol. I can't grow a beard so maybe we all envy what we don't have.

  • @mikemalo6336
    @mikemalo6336 Před 11 měsíci

    the sahara used to be a grassland, bigger than the United States but, that was back when Lebanon had giant cedar trees.

  • @quintanherbold6976
    @quintanherbold6976 Před rokem

    Nice

  • @davidbryden7904
    @davidbryden7904 Před rokem +1

    We really need to get over this idea of "man's triumph over nature". We ARE nature; a part of a living system. Imho
    ✌️🌏☮️

  • @mikemalo6336
    @mikemalo6336 Před 11 měsíci

    what is the significance of the door just behind his right shoulder being opened so it is exactly edge on and nearly reaches him? Is it an acoustic device, like a baffle somehow? Does it accentuate his already pyogenically creamy voice, like a resonant chamber?

  • @jeromeogivenz4470
    @jeromeogivenz4470 Před rokem

    When I go surfing on the San Joaquin delta in California it’s easy to think that it might be the ninth wonder of the world

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke Před rokem +4

    Fun thing about sucking water out of the ground, the voids it creates result in the ground above sinking down, so, the more they pull out, the sooner they'll create a nice depression in which a surface lake can form, in place of the cities and towns within it... :P

    • @IvanDmitriev1
      @IvanDmitriev1 Před rokem +1

      There are no cities and few towns out where it is.

    • @tgeliot
      @tgeliot Před rokem +1

      @@IvanDmitriev1 Not to mention no source of water to fill the lake.

  • @johnburns4017
    @johnburns4017 Před rokem

    Simon you have not lost your hair. I just fell down.

  • @javidturabor4449
    @javidturabor4449 Před rokem +10

    And nato destroyed this 😅

    • @joebannon9443
      @joebannon9443 Před 15 dny

      No need for NATO to destroy it the Libyans did a very good job of that. I worked on the project for two years engineered built by Mann Ghh during the embargo. Project was late, in the end it feed the biggest evaporation ponds in the world. Lack of maintenance the-supporting plant feel into disrepair & I would doubt if it still functions. I worked on the turbine gas compressor which feed the power stations these in turn provided the power for the water lift pumps.

  • @gamerjaqi7873
    @gamerjaqi7873 Před rokem

    That was my though, yeah this is great but are they squandering it and when does it run

  • @Preciouspink
    @Preciouspink Před rokem

    We need a 50 year tunnel plan to bring the fresh water dumping into the ocean needs to be seriously tapped in so doing, reducing the possible threat of diluting the salinity of the globes heat redistribution elevator.

  • @nebularveil5598
    @nebularveil5598 Před rokem +2

    Your beard hair makes up for the lack of hair. Love your beard❤

  • @NN-lx4mb
    @NN-lx4mb Před rokem

    I remember when the Americans aka NATO bombed the pipe manufacturing facility. The intention was to cripple Libia. Glad it’s operating and it continues to be expanded. Incredible engineering!

  • @piperjaycie
    @piperjaycie Před rokem

    Why don’t places that need water dig huge rivers from the coast?? Wouldn’t that also help a little with sea levels. I know that would have to be massive rivers and operations but still.

    • @toddkes5890
      @toddkes5890 Před rokem +3

      Because that would have a stream of salt water going into the country, which could affect the very small fertile regions of Libya. Out of all of Libya's area, only about 2% of it is considered habitable. Libya has effectively zero rivers going through its territory, meaning that if salt water gets into the land, the only way to get the salt out is to wait for a really long time.
      Now what you might try to do is set up concrete basins that are filled at high tide, some of the water evaporates, and at low tide the higher salt water gets washed out. Again, you have to make sure that the salt water doesn't get into your farming water.

  • @WasabiSniffer
    @WasabiSniffer Před rokem +1

    For all its political problems, Libya’s got a hell of a mega project. Hopefully they’ll figure something else out in case that reservoir runs out a little sooner

  • @Yippiia
    @Yippiia Před rokem +2

    Everyone knows Babytron is the real 8th wonder.

  • @Wild_Danimal
    @Wild_Danimal Před rokem +2

    I miss the way CZcams used to look, I don’t like change