BEIJING, China, May 20, 2006

China Completes Three Gorges Dam

China Finishes Dam For World's Largest Hydroelectric Project

  • Video Bus Flips, Avoids Tanker Crash

    CBS News RAW: A bus turned over on a main road in Shandong Province in China and surveillance cameras captured its near-miss accident with a tanker truck.

  • Video China Battles Web Addiction

    You may think your kids spend too much time on the Internet. It's become such a problem in China that the country has opened its first Internet addiction clinic. Celia Hatton reports.

  • This Xinhua file photo taken in December 2004 shows the aerial view of the Three Gorges Dam in Yichang, central China's Hubei Province. The axis of the dam is 2,309 meters, the longest in the world.

    This Xinhua file photo taken in December 2004 shows the aerial view of the Three Gorges Dam in Yichang, central China's Hubei Province. The axis of the dam is 2,309 meters, the longest in the world.  (AP)

  • Interactive Focus On China

    Explore the history, people and economy of China, the world’s most populous nation.

(AP)  China finished building an enormous dam across the Yangtze River on Saturday, an important milestone for the world's largest hydroelectric project.

The staccato of simple paper firecrackers marked the completion of the 607-foot-high, 1.4-mile-long Three Gorges dam.

Formidable tasks remain before the hugely controversial project is completed, including the construction of power-generating facilities and a ship lift, said Pu Haqing, deputy director of the State Council Three Gorges Project Construction Committee, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

The final 12 of the dam's 26 generators are to be installed over the next two years, finishing the project in 2008, a year ahead of schedule, according to Xinhua.

Begun in 1993, the project has steamed ahead with the backing of the Communist leadership despite objections to its $22 billion cost and environmental and social impact.

More than 1.3 million people have been relocated to make way for the dam and its reservoir.

Environmentalists and engineers have warned that the reservoir risks becoming polluted with waste from cities and towns upriver, many of which lack adequate sewage treatment plants.

The China Yangtze River Three Gorges Project Development Corp. has spent $2.5 million on a vessel to collect as much as 7 million cubic feet of garbage that accumulates at the dam each year, according to Xinhua.

The government maintains that when it is fully operational, the dam will alleviate flooding on the Yangtze and produce electricity for an economy whose rapid growth has created energy shortages in recent years.

Saturday's simple celebration was not attended by senior Chinese leaders.

Plans for a more elaborate celebration were canceled, Xinhua reported, without giving a reason. Elaborate state celebrations have been rolled back amid a growing disparity between the urban rich and rural poor.


©MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Exclusive Webshow

Michelle Obama tells how her role as the First Lady has changed her perspective. Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • The Berlin Wall The Berlin Wall

    Photographer Peter Turnley Captures the Fall

  • The Fall Of The Berlin Wall The Fall Of The Berlin Wall

    Looking Back at the Wall that Once Divided Germany On the 20th Anniversary of Its Collapse

  • Patricia Clarkson Patricia Clarkson

    Television and Film Actress, Yale School of Drama Graduate and Academy Award Nominee

  • Day in Pictures Day in Pictures

    A Glimpse at the Day's News as Seen Through a Camera Lens

  • Andre Agassi Andre Agassi

    Former Top-Seeded Tennis Star, Gossip Column Favorite and Philanthropist

  • Yankees Victory Parade Yankees Victory Parade

    The Yankees Celebrate Their 27th World Series Championship with a Ticker-Tape Parade Up Broadway

Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: