China | Change the channel

China has plans for grand canals

The building scheme is part of an effort to become a “transportation power”

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Xinhua/Shutterstock (13331262b)Aerial photo taken on Aug. 28, 2022 shows a construction site of the Pinglu Canal project in Lingshan County, south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. The construction of the Pinglu Canal project officially kicked off on Sunday. The canal, stretching about 135 km, aims to link Xijiang River with ports in the Beibu Gulf. Upon completion, the canal, starting from the Xijin reservoir in city of Hengzhou and ending at Luwu Town of Lingshan County, where ships could reach the Beibu Gulf via the Qinjiang River, will open a shorter route to the sea for Guangxi and other regions in southwest China.China Guangxi Pinglu Canal Project Construction - 28 Aug 2022

These are good times for local officials who want to build expensive infrastructure. To revive a flagging economy, battered by draconian pandemic-control measures, the central government is giving them freer rein. The southern province of Guangxi has a project that fits the bill: a canal costing $10.5bn that will link its main river system to the sea. It will involve a spree of demolition, digging, dredging and building over the next four and a half years. Mulled over for more than a century, the project began last month.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “Change the channel”

Getting the job done: How Ukraine can win

From the September 17th 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

Chinese Communist Party members pose for photos with a sculpture of the party flag outside the party museum in Beijing

China needs its frightened officials to save the economy

After years of being hounded by anti-graft authorities, many are too afraid to act

A worker is working on a drug production line  of a pharmaceutical company in Meishan, Chin

The bad side-effects of China’s campaign to cut drug costs

Poor quality is one. An angry public is another


Illustration of a translation app. The text says "this is a" with the options "negotiation", "argument" and "battle" in both English and Chinese

America and China are talking. But much gets lost in translation

How linguistic differences complicate relations between the great powers


It’s a good time to be an astrologer in China

In the face of hardship, the country’s youth are embracing superstition

The early days of the Trump administration, as viewed from China

A good start, but it could get worse quickly

How (un)popular is China’s Communist Party?

As the economy falters and the social compact frays, Xi Jinping wants to know