Los Angeles Times

Sea crossing a bridge too far for some

Mega-project linking Hong Kong, Macau stirs controvers­y as it’s set to open this week.

- By Violet Law

HONG KONG — Nearly every other day for the last few years, volunteers from the Hong Kong Dolphin Conservati­on Society chartered a yacht to search for Chinese white dolphins at the mouth of the Pearl River where it meets the South China Sea. The estuary was once a sanctuary for this endangered species until the constant burr of jackhammer­ing and welding chased them away.

This westernmos­t fringe of the Hong Kong archipelag­o mushroomed over the last several years into a sprawling constructi­on site at sea. The largest of the islands, Lantau, is lined with cranes and rigs for a rash of infrastruc­ture projects.

This week, the most awaited among them — the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge, which will be the world’s longest crossing of its kind — will open to traffic.

More than a decade in the making, this combinatio­n of an underwater tunnel, bridges and artificial islands spans the Pearl River Delta and stretches longer than 14 Golden Gate Bridges lined up end to end.

However, what should be a celebrated feat in this Chinese metropolis built upon engineerin­g marvels has turned controvers­ial. Its much-delayed completion has resulted in significan­t cost overruns, and several workers were killed during its constructi­on. The city’s budding environmen­tal movement decries the destructio­n of marine habitat and the pollution that the increased traffic will bring, while casting doubt on economic benefits trumpeted by government officials.

An even greater concern for some is that the bridge marks Beijing’s first concrete move to subsume Hong Kong into a regional integratio­n plan with mainland China called the Greater Bay Area, which encompasse­s a cluster of cities with a population of more than 60 million people.

Hong Kong is a former British colony of 7.4 million that was returned to Chinese rule in 1997 under a framework known as “one country, two systems,” whereby it maintains a semiautono­mous status. But that independen­ce has been eroded in recent years, and many Hong Kongers view the sea link as a further leash to mainland China.

Zhuhai and Macau are adjoining areas on the mainland west of Hong Kong. Both are tourist draws, with Macau rivaling Las Vegas as a gambling mecca.

That China’s top leaders, President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang, are expected to preside over the ribbon-cutting for the bridge in Zhuhai on Tuesday only underscore­s the political significan­ce of the project.

The government has projected that as many as 29,000 cars will traverse the sea link daily by 2030, although constructi­on of another delta-spanning bridge less than 20 miles to the north in mainland China is underway.

Hong Kong taxpayers footed 60% of the total $20billion bill, including more than $1 billion in cost overruns. “It’s not going to break even,” said Albert Lai, a civil engineer and advocate for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Some experts argue that some of the benefits may be intangible.

“This makes Hong Kong a lot more accessible for goods, passengers and trade, so this is a benefit from the economic perspectiv­e,” said John Ap of the Institute for Tourism Studies in Macau. “The bridge will help enhance Hong Kong’s status as the region’s hub.”

The Macau and Zhuhai sections of the link were completed years ago. With the Hong Kong section lagging behind, workers such as Thapa Paul Denedick were under pressure to hurry.

“They told us to work quickly,” said Denedick, a scaffolder who worked 12hour days, six days a week. “I thought it was hard and scary because I was in the middle of the sea.”

In March 2017, Denedick, along with two other workers, fell into the sea as their work platform collapsed.

“I thought I was already dead,” Denedick recalled, before he eventually unfastened his safety harness latched to the platform. His colleagues died.

All told, 20 deaths were reported throughout the project, making it the deadliest constructi­on in the city’s history.

Still recovering from his injuries, Denedick recently moved to a newly developed town on Lantau with a clear view of the bridge, but he said he tries not to get a close look.

In addition to the new town, Lantau is already home to the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport, with a third runway under constructi­on, a Disneyland resort and a marine park. With the sea bridge coming online, the government announced a plan to reclaim 4,200 acres of land and build more new towns for 1.1 million residents. The plan stoked a protest this month by those who see the developmen­t as unsustaina­ble.

In Tai O, the last fishing village on Lantau’s western tip, retired fisherman Wong Ho gazed at the sea link, which lights up like a serpentine ribbon of blue lights.

“More constructi­on might be bad for the environmen­t, but there’s little I can worry about,” Wong said. “As far as I can tell, developmen­t is still king.”

Other than the workers who died, perhaps the most tangible losers in the massive developmen­t are the Chinese white dolphins. The Hong Kong Dolphin Conservati­on Society’s census shows a sharp decline in their population during the five years of bridge and tunnel constructi­on on the Hong Kong section — from 80 in 2012 to 47 in 2017.

“The government set up the conservati­on zones only after constructi­on has begun — that’s too late,” said Heyman Mak of the conservati­on society as she completed another excursion with zero sightings. “These wild dolphins are now living more like caged animals.”

Law is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Anthony Wallace AFP/Getty Images ?? ONE OF the artificial islands that make up the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge is seen last week.
Anthony Wallace AFP/Getty Images ONE OF the artificial islands that make up the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge is seen last week.

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