NICARAGUA: SPECTER OF THE CANAL

by Diego Cupolo, Upside Down World

Exactly 100 years after its inauguration, the Panama Canal may soon become one of two waterways linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. In a move that would alter world commerce, Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega and Chinese telecoms billionaire Wang Jing have announced plans to start construction on a $40-billion canal across Nicaragua this December.

"Central America is at the center of North-South and East-West global trade flows, and we believe Nicaragua provides the perfect location for a new international shipping and logistics hub," Wang said in a press release. "Global shipping demands the efficiency and cost competitiveness of increasingly larger ships, and we believe this project will serve that still unmet need."

The proposed waterway would lead ships into Lago de Nicaragua, the nation's largest fresh water source, and require approximately 120 miles of excavation through sparsely populated jungles in the Nicaragua's southeastern region, as well as excavation on the Pacific Coast.

Wang's Hong Kong-based company, HK Nicaragua Canal Development Investment Co., also known as HKND Group, obtained the right to dig and operate the canal for 50 years, with the possibility to renew the contract for another 50 years in the future. The Supreme Court in Managua has also approved the project, ruling a Chinese-operated waterway does not infringe on the nation's constitution.

If completed, Nicaragua would create a 170-mile passage between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans to compete with the century-old Panama Canal—where construction crews are currently building a new lane of traffic to double capacity, although the expansion has faced repeated delays.

Along with the canal, Wang plans to build an oil pipeline, an overland route for vehicles, two deepwater ports, two airports and establish duty-free zones in Nicaragua. HKDN Group representatives said revenue from interoceanic traffic could lift Nicaragua out of poverty. The nation has long been listed as the second poorest economy in the western hemisphere after Haiti.

"Nicaragua will become by far the richest country in Central America – and that will affect the entire region," the newspaper Pagina Siete of La Paz, Bolivia, quoted HKDN spokesman and former La Paz mayor Ronald MacLean Abaroa as saying in 2013. "Investment in this project is three to four times the GDP of Nicaragua, there will be an effect of full employment and prosperity," he continued.

While the canal would have a significant impact on local and global economies, many details remain unclear, including a finalized canal route. Manuel Coronel Kautz, chief of Nicaragua's Canal Authority, has also said work for the Nicaraguan canal would not begin until 2015.

Regardless, project feasibility studies are underway and HKDN representatives said the waterway would be operational by December 2019. According to MacLean Abaroa, the canal will be built as fast as possible to accommodate growing international demand for interoceanic waterways that can handle larger vessels.

"The transfer of bulk commodities between the Americas and Asia demands enormous ships, such as ore carriers and supertankers that simply cannot pass through the Panama Canal," MacLean Abaroa said in a video interview on the HKDN Group website. "The Nicaragua Canal has the potential to open up new cost-efficient routes for the shipment of commodities, especially crude oil, [liquefied natural gas], steel from the United States to Asia and iron ore from Brazil to Asia," he added.

Critics of the canal have said HKDN Group lacks credentials and does not have the necessary experience to undertake a complex project of such magnitude. On a wider perspective, the Nicaraguan Canal is one of several projects under Wang's umbrella company, Beijing Interoceanic Canal Investment Management Co., through which he is also building a $10-billion deepwater port in Ukraine.

A somewhat reclusive tycoon with global ambitions, not much is known about Wang's personal life other than he made his fortune as the chairman of the Chinese mobile phone technology provider Beijing Xinwei Telecom Technology Co.

"This canal has been talked about for hundreds of years," Wang said in an Oct. 2013 interview with the South China Morning Post. "Spain wanted to build it five hundred years ago, but then the Panama Canal was built a hundred years ago. This time, in the 21st century, it was me who took the initiative and proposed the project to the government of Nicaragua last year."

The idea for a Nicaraguan Canal has a long history of foreign intervention and also prevention. In 1897, the United States Nicaraguan Canal Commission proposed a waterway through Lago de Nicaragua, but abandoned the plan when it took over the problem-ridden French excavation of the Panama Canal in 1904.

US troops later occupied Nicaragua between 1912 and 1933 to deter other nations from building a Nicaraguan canal, which would pose as competition for the US-owned Panama Canal. This period gave rise to Augusto César Sandino, Nicaragua's anti-imperialist icon and inspiration for the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN), the revolutionary force that overthrew former dictator Anastasio Somoza DeBayle in 1979 and currently serves as the incumbent political party under President Ortega.

Since the 1930s, prospects for a Nicaraguan Canal were largely abandoned as opponents also cited the risk posed by high volcanic activity in the region along with the environmental impact of linking ocean waters through Nicaragua's largest freshwater lake.

In recent years, environmentalists have said the project could threaten drinking water supplies and an ecosystem of 300 small islands in Lago de Nicaragua that serves as a breeding ground for the American crocodile. Nicaragua's nascent tourism industry may also suffer as ocean liners begin to surround Isla de Ometepe, a rare jungle island formed by twin volcanoes that has become one of the nation's top attractions.

In response, Wang told The Telegraph protecting the regional environment was a top priority for HKND Group.

"I take all responsibility for any environmental damage. I have told my employees that if we make a mistake on this front, we will be dishonored in the history textbooks of Nicaragua," he said, acknowledging the nation's rough past with foreign intervention.

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Diego Cupolo is an independent journalist, photographer and author of Seven Syrians: War Accounts From Syrian Refugees, released this year by 8th House Publishing. He serves as Latin America regional editor for Global South Development Magazine. See more of his work at www.diegocupolo.com

Image: Map of possible canal route. Source: The Telegraph via Upside Down World

This story first appeared, with footnotes, Jan. 17 on Upside Down World.

From our Daily Report:

Panama, Nicaragua canal plans stalled
World War 4 Report, Jan. 6, 2014

See also:

THE RETURN OF PLAN PUEBLA-PANAMA
The New Struggle for Central America
by Bill Weinberg, World War 4 Report
World War 4 Report, May 2007

SANDINISTA REDUX
Nicaragua Sticks It to Tio Sam —Again!
by Michael I. Niman, Art Voice, Buffalo, NY
World War 4 Report, May 2007

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Reprinted by World War 4 Report, June 28, 2014