Cyprus Today

Turkey reveals route for planned canal

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TURKEY announced on Monday the route for a planned canal that would reduce shipping traffic on the busy Bosphorus Strait and transform the European half of İstanbul into an island.

Work on the 45-kilometre Kanal İstanbul, linking the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara west of the Bosphorus, will begin this year, Transport Minister Ahmet Arslan said.

The Bosphorus is one of the world’s busiest waterways with 42,000 vessels passing through in 2016, compared with 16,800 that transited the Suez Canal in the same year.

It is the only maritime outlet to the oceans for Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine and Georgia, and for Russia’s Black Sea ports.

With urban projects on the canal’s banks and logistical centres to be built in the Black Sea, Kanal İstanbul will be Turkey’s most expensive project yet, Mr Arslan said.

Without specifying the exact cost, he added that the project would be funded through public and private partnershi­ps.

The new canal would not be subject to the Montreux Convention­s Regarding the Use of Straits which guarantees free passage to civilian vessels during peacetime, he said, meaning Turkey could charge vessels using it.

It will run from the Durusu region on İstanbul’s Black Sea coast to Küçükçekme­ce Lake on the Sea of Marmara. Documents from Turkey’s Environmen­t Ministry showed the canal will be 25 metres deep and 250-1,000 metres wide, depending on where the docks are located.

Kanal İstanbul will also be located near a number of projects in northern İstanbul spearheade­d by President Tayyip Erdoğan’s AK Party government, including the third bridge over the Bosphorus, which opened in 2016, and the city’s third airport which is under constructi­on.

The soil to be dug out for the canal project will be used for agricultur­e as well as for artificial islands and ports to be built in the Sea of Marmara, Mr Arslan said.

The plan has many critics and Mr Erdoğan himself light-heartedly called it a “crazy project” when he first raised it in 2011. Environmen­talists say it would pave the way for further developmen­t in the city’s north, advancing the destructio­n of forests there.

A report evaluating the project’s environmen­tal impact, which is required by the government before constructi­on commences, is currently being compiled, the Environmen­t Ministry said.

İstanbul’s Chamber of Geology Engineers said the initial filing for the environmen­tal impact report did not take into account several factors that make the project unviable.

The project has the potential to severely impact the climate and balance of minerals and nutrients in the Black Sea and surroundin­g areas, and would deplete oxygen levels in the Sea of Marmara, it said.

Constructi­on has been a key driver of the economy under the AK Party. The government’s critics say the legal framework surroundin­g the constructi­on sector has been repeatedly watered down, creating loopholes that developers can exploit for profit.

 ??  ?? The Russian naval ship Azov sails in the Bosphorus, on its way to the Mediterran­ean Sea
The Russian naval ship Azov sails in the Bosphorus, on its way to the Mediterran­ean Sea

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