Japan To Build 250-Mile-Long, Four Storey-High Wall To Stop Tsunamis 197
An anonymous reader points out this daunting construction plan in Japan. "Japanese authorities have unveiled plans to build a giant 250-mile long sea barrier to protect its coastline from devastating tsunamis. According to the proposals, the £4.6bn ($6.8bn) barrier would reach 12.5m high in some places – stretching taller than a four storey building. It would be made out of cement – and actually be composed of a chain of smaller sea walls to make construction easier. The plan comes four years after a huge tsunami ravaged Japan's north-eastern coast."
Most of Japan is very beautiful... (Score:5, Interesting)
.... but their beaches, usually not so much. So hopefully this won't be too much of an eyesore. Japan is usually pretty good about trying to fit human-made structures into the landscape; my friends and I had a running joke when we were there: "They have the prettiest drainage ditches here!" ;) That said, a 250-mile long, 4-story "anything", that's going to be hard to make look nice.
I'm rather curious about what kind of concrete they're going to use. Japan has been a pioneer in the use of fiber-reinforced concrete, I wonder if they'll use that in lieu of steel that may need cathodic protection in such a high salt environment?
Re:Most of Japan is very beautiful... (Score:4, Informative)
There are already a lot of these walls in Japan and they are not really ugly. They aren't walls like you would surround your house with, they have sloped sides. There is usually a path along the top and stops or slopes at intervals. They are grass covered, and sometimes lined with trees but usually kept clear. More like mounds than what most people think of as walls.
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"Most of Japan is very beautiful... but their beaches, usually not so much."
Yea, all that whale and dolphin blood stinks to heaven.
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" That said, a 250-mile long, 4-story "anything", that's going to be hard to make look nice."
As long as you can see it from the moon, it will be a tourist magnet.
last one didn't work out, either (Score:2)
kinda like any engineering project, I guess... pick the maximum incredible external threat, and design resistance to... uh, wait, the budget got cut HOW MUCH? OK, well, guys, let's pick the maximum credible external threat we can protect against 80% of the time for under $7 billion. make it modular so we can truck 'em in. seaming with tape is OK if we have to.
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Artificial mangrove swamp?
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The OP is talking about using fiber instead of rebar. Steel rebar is a problem because it eventually will rust which damages the integrity of the wall.
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They're not using concrete; according to the blurb, they're using cement
Using pure cement, without aggregate, makes no sense. This is almost certainly just a dumb journalist.
But building the wall at all makes little sense. It takes centuries for the stress in the fault line to build up enough for a really big quake. They just had a HUGE 9.0 quake, so another is not due for a long, long time. Sediment records show they occur approximately every 300 years. This is just pandering to the construction companies that are big political donors to the LDP [wordpress.com].
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Yeah, the Berlin Wall had a lot of nice murals on it.
Ugly Solution (Score:4, Interesting)
A huge wall seems like an ugly and in-elegant solution. Building large mounds of forested areas would be much more attractive and useful (as a wildlife, tourist, and a tree resource). As a backup - build man made lakes at a higher altitude that can dump into the ocean in under 20 minutes and time the water dump to coincide with the tsunami. I would much rather be surrounded by trees and lakes than look at a big, ugly wall when I went to the beach.
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Your idea of artificial lakes - perhap
Re:Ugly Solution (Score:5, Interesting)
That the proposal is just bare concrete seems completely inexplicable to me; not only is concrete ugly as sin, it's also hugely unfriendly to the environment in terms of CO2 production.
You're not familiar with Japan, are you? You may not be able to get a permit to cut down a tree in your yard, if you're lucky enough to have one, but they're perfectly happy to buy up every redwood tree they can convince someone to cut down on their behalf. They coat them in tar and sink them beneath the ocean. Mature redwoods are some of the world's most efficient fixers of CO2; a mature tree actually fixes more carbon than the equivalent mass of young trees, or the equivalent area coverage of same.
Japan gives not one tenth of one fuck about environmental impact, so long as it doesn't affect them, just like everyone else. And they seem to be incapable of recognizing that the things they are doing are doing that, just like everyone else.
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Some tress can't be removed because they have historic or particular aesthetic value. That sort of thing is common in many countries in Europe as well.
On the other hand, after the war Japan planted a lot of trees to provide a source of cheap building material. Unfortunately they produce a lot of pollen that causes allergies, especially if not carefully managed. For that reason many are now being removed, and either replaced with less bothersome trees or the land used with something else.
Re:Ugly Solution (Score:5, Funny)
researched whales into extinction.
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If it wasn't for international law they'd have probably fished whales to extinction by now.
I had a dream once that alien space whales and dolphins came to visit earth, and developed a taste for Japanese.
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That the proposal is just bare concrete seems completely inexplicable to me; not only is concrete ugly as sin, it's also hugely unfriendly to the environment in terms of CO2 production.
I don't buy your claim of "hugely". The problem here is that while it's a substantial pile of concrete and while that concrete will generate a lot of CO2 as it solidifies, there is a vast amount of atmosphere. It's just not significant even if you do buy fully into catastrophic AGW.
Now, consider also the pollution from an unprotected coastline getting hit by a tsunami. Even if you ignore the various chemicals and debris washed into the ocean by the tsunami, there is a considerable amount of CO2 generated
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I don't buy your claim of "hugely". The problem here is that while it's a substantial pile of concrete and while that concrete will generate a lot of CO2 as it solidifies, there is a vast amount of atmosphere. It's just not significant even if you do buy fully into catastrophic AGW.
It's not just the *use*, it's also the production of the concrete itself which tends to get lumped in with the end product in environmental impact calculations. Production of concrete is responsible for approximately 5% of ALL
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The concrete used to create this wall is a drop in the bucket compared to the concrete used for making and maintaining roads.
Yeah, it's a big wall, but think on this: in the US, the concrete that makes up the interstate system is at least 11" thick. That's not counting any asphalt layer on top. Each lane is 10' wide. It's 47,714 miles long (as of 2012, according to wikipedia). Not counting shoulders, exits, bridges, etc. and assuming (incorrectly) that the interstate system is four-lane all the way, tha
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It's not just the *use*, it's also the production of the concrete itself which tends to get lumped in with the end product in environmental impact calculations.
I know. That's why I posted. It's just not that much CO2 being produced by that much concrete.
Production of concrete is responsible for approximately 5% of ALL mankind's CO2 emissions of which about half comes from the chemical process itself and almost as much from the fuel burnt to provide power for process, with the bulk of the contribution coming from the cement use which produces approx 850-900kg of CO2 per 1000kg of cement.
Notice that you could offset about half of that emissions just by putting out all coal fires. Concrete is generally a very high value product for the amount of carbon dioxide produced and this case appears no different. I don't see the point of the complaint.
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A huge wall seems like an ugly and in-elegant solution.
Don't worry. Godzilla will just knock it down anyway.
Not only inelegant, but (Score:2)
If the entirety of Japan can rebuff a giant wave, then that wave must slosh back in the other direction (instead of being dissipated by land).
So, who is responsible for such "bounce" waves?
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If you watched video of the 2011 tsunami, you've seen that it isn't a singular wave which comes ashore and retreats back (there are such tsunamis, usually caused by loca
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To continue, your suggestion of "mounds of forested areas"... sounds like you have no sense of what forces happen in the ocean. Even just to keep a developed beach, a lot of money gets spent moving the sand back to its original position. Sand normally moves along the shoreline, so as soon as one part is developed, sand from that region isn't moved downstream... so then at your beach, you put up groins to help maintain your sand, but then sand builds up on one side... basically, if you give a damn what you
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you put up groins to help maintain your sand
Brings new meaning to "pound sand".
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I'm sure politicians, and not Engineers are deciding this.
Absolutely. And when Politicians and their Excel enabled lackeys - the bean counters - get involved, you'll find thatThere will be studies and presentations to show now much money will be saved by making the wall X feet shorter.
A very good example of this is the fencing systems along American interstate highways. Supposed to keep deer and other big animals away. Some one with more power than brains made the decision to save money, and made the fences shorter. Too bad the deer can jump over it. Rather th
Slashdot comments for the short of attention (Score:2)
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and what did your giant attention span gain you in this situation? oh, you agree with the "opinion" without RTFA and determining that the end result will most likely not be a "garish ecological disaster." Next time, try fact. All the self-esteem building with none of that messy confusion.
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Well, at least now that you read the article you went from 'disaster' to 'disrupt'. Thank you for so eloquently making my point.
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So.. they should learn from the dutch and build a series of walls?
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My understanding is that the towering wave thing doesn't actually ever happen. A tsunami is more like a tide that keeps coming than a wave.
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It does, actually, it just requires the right geography.
Here's one [geology.com] that hit Alaska back in the 50s.
Imagine what would happen if an earthquake in the north Atlantic caused a tsunami in Norway. You'd get insanely high waves in the fjords.
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Why don't you try a mythbusters style experiment? Scale everything down. To simulate the tsunami wave, you will go to the beach and find a nice 4 foot wave. To simulate your massive high pressure water pump you will use a squirt gun. Use one of those "monster cannon" squirt guns. Wait for wave. Aim squirt gun. Fire. Record how you totally dissipated the wave's evergy, or not. I'm sure Japan is eager to see your results.
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Scale everything down. To simulate the tsunami wave, you will go to the beach and find a nice 4 foot wave.
You could get a wave that would have height to scale, but it would have the wrong length. And anyway, square-cube law says you're going to have to diddle all your proportions to get scale to work accurately.
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Ok fine. The proportions are off. So let's do some guesstimates based on the total energy. According to this http://www.geologyinmotion.com... [geologyinmotion.com] the 2011 Japan tsumani had somewhere between 31 and 3100 KILOTONS of energy. That's equivalent to the energy in 1 to 100 Hiroshima nuclear bombs. So I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to figure out how to power a line of giant squirt guns that deliver the equivalent of between 1-100 Hiroshima nuclear bombs of energy as a directed stream of water.
While you're
Tsunami watch (Score:5, Funny)
Will that be enough? (Score:5, Interesting)
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the politician's cousin/uncle/brother-in-law who surprisingly "won" the bid for construction is very happy. Politics as usual.
Indeed, that's sad, and nobody in Japan will raise that problem high enough that it becomes a concern for everyone.
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"You're going to need to move an extraordinary amount of dirt."
And you think the raw material for building a 250 mile concrete wall is just going to be lying around nearby do you?
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"A wall is much thinner than an artificial island"
And much longer.
"for the crazy idea you mention"
I didn't mention any idea. Can't you even read poster names?
"I think I even drove on a road that was more than 250 miles long before."
Congratulations. Do you want a medal or something for driving along that road? Or perhaps for that miserable attempt at irony?
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And much longer.
They want to protect 400 km of shoreline. You'll need 400 km of protection whether you use a wall or artificial island.
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I'm not sure what height you'd count as a mountain but most people would imagine its more than the few fathoms you'd have in a coastal bay.
Clearly you've never heard of breakwaters.
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Why are you lying about such a thing?
The lying part is your interpretation of the pics. I've never said that was the same city, and the pics were just some illustration for the post.
Yeah! (Score:5, Funny)
Good-bye 12.49 Meter tsunamis, welcome 13 meter tsunamis.
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My wife insists that size doesn't matter.
Does Moore's law apply to Tsunamis? (Score:4, Insightful)
It doesn't matter how big you engineer for, sooner or later something big enough will come along and topple everything. Containing high water levels in nature has been tried many times before and they always fail sooner or later.
Re:Does Moore's law apply to Tsunamis? (Score:5, Insightful)
Water often looses. See the Netherlands. In fact: hire the Dutch to design your wall.
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I expect Japan will hire dutch firms. Japan and the Netherlands have a long history together (including a 200+ year monopoly on trade)
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There are no permanent fixes in our world. Things wear and need maintenance. One inch a year should be taken into account with normal maintenance but that doesn't mean it'll cost extra.
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Why was the city even established in such a terrible place? Didn't the surveyors notice the elevation was bellow sea level?
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Hire the Vogons (Score:2)
Water often looses. See the Netherlands. In fact: hire the Dutch to design your wall.
No, hire Vogons to read poetry to it.
This causes the Tsunami to turn immediately and hurl itself in the other direction.
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It doesn't matter how big you engineer for, sooner or later something big enough will come along and topple everything. Containing high water levels in nature has been tried many times before and they always fail sooner or later.
So is it a bad idea to be protected against 95% of all tsunami, instead of 75%?
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Moore's law? No. Weibull distribution, maybe.
As in "The walls will wobble, but they won't fall down"?
You'd never get it by the NIMBYs here (Score:3)
If the NIMBYs have a problem with windmills "destroying the view", imagine how they'd react to this plan if it were enacted here in North America.
Anti garavity device (Score:2)
May as well build an anti gravity device and get done with it ;-)
It won't work... (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is the wall itself. There will be earthquakes to first crack it.
And "water always wins", as the Doctor says.
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Or an earthquake will drop the wall a couple of meters first.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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An extendable, super powerful sword that they mysteriously forgot about until they *really* needed it, as opposed to simply chopping up all the easier monsters with it.
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Exactly! Came here to say this. Perhaps the giant robot program could be led by Japan's agriculture ministry.
Anti-Kaiju wall (Score:5, Funny)
* May not actually keep Godzilla out.
yes, but why does it need laser cannons ? (Score:2)
"the Agriculture Ministry is not in charge of Gundam."
But, can it stop (Score:2)
Or... (Score:4, Informative)
You could not build any critical infrastructure within a set distance from the coast, and no habitable buildings within a second less restrictive distance. This is basic risk mitigation. You don't build critical facilities on a fault line, you shouldn't build one in the direct path of a (potential) tsunami. Go look at the USGS website, or any of a number of wind zone maps. All this stuff has data and is plotted out for the US - all you have to do is set your risk factor (50 years for hurricane/snow, 500 for earthquake in the US) and note your exceptions.
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Have you looked at a picture of Japan lately? The country is in the shape of a string bean. Imagine telling US citizens that 20% of the best land is now off limits, good luck with that.
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It's not really the "best" land so much as the "most desirable". We actually tend to like to build on land that we would be better off using to grow food, and farmland would be the kind of thing you could do with land that could be threatened by a tsunami.
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You don't build critical facilities on a fault line
Really? How many critical facilities already exist on fault lines...being on the fault line doesn't matter. The earthquake that damaged the Washington monument had an epicenter in Mineral, Va roughly 85 miles away. You certainly could build facilities in extremely low risk areas, but then you have to find people with the expertise and willingness to work that them. Clearly from the USGH hazard map, we shouldn't put anything on the entire west coast, Hawaii, or the Alaskan coast.
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Compared to downtown Hong Kong, Japan is mostly uninhabited country. Everything is relative.
What this means is that coastal areas where tsunamis are likely are off limits to certain types of development. Farm land would be a great application for this area, for example, but not so good for high rises, nuclear plants, and hospitals. The actual impact force of the tsunami is far, far smaller than the flood area (which can be relatively easily dealt with). You're talking about the major restrictions covering
Big Tsunami wall (Score:2)
Australia (Score:5, Funny)
South-east Australia already has a similar barrier. We call it "New Zealand".
Made of cement ? (Score:2)
Cement is only one ingredient in concrete.
Is anyone else reminded of King Canute? (Score:4, Interesting)
And the rapid waves drew nearer, falling sounding on the shore;"
--William Thackeray King Canute [allpoetry.com]
Fluid mechanics? (Score:2)
Since I'm not an expert in fluid mechanics, my first question would be, not that a wall would be totally unhelpful, but would it be far more useful, practical and conservative to find a way to break the momentum of the water hitting the land?
I saw artificial reefs suggested above, but are there any other methods of doing this?
I don't know, I mean Pacific Rim jokes aside (which I'm very glad to see a number of you were on top of as I loved that movie), but I think a wall seems a short-sighted an impractical
Outsource It! (Score:2)
They should outsource the wall design and construction to the French. They have experience building walls/defense. [wikipedia.org]
Then they outsource the testing for effectiveness to the Germans. [wikipedia.org]
And Then (Score:2)
Only 6.8 bn? (Score:2)
Americans could build Berlinesque walls on the norther border at that price/hour, in addition to another to the south and along the eastern seaboard and the Pacific coast.
Jaeger Test (Score:2)
If you can stop a jaeger, you can stop a tsunami.
wrong problem (Score:2)
They're saying Tsunami (Score:2)
fake story? (Score:2)
Exactly who are these 'authorities'? Where are the 'plans'? Who approved the money for this project and why do the citizens have no say in it? Later the word 'proposals' is used; so is it a plan or a proposal?
This is very poor journalism. Not a single authority is identified. There are references to two critics of the project who have no authority and their opinion doesn't matter. There is no substance to this story at all, no citations, no evidence that it is not just in the reporter's imagination.
& ce
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It wouldn't work to surround Florida with a wall unless you anchor it way way down (500 feet?). Most of Southern Florida sits on limestone that is full of holes and the water will just come up from underneath.