Yes, Joe, it is controversial. The thing that worries me is that China has already lost a number of persons, the figure varying from 75,000 to 200,000 according to the source, from two modern hydroelectric dams overflowing, due to natural phenomena, plus other relatively minor ones. The three gorges, after which it is named, are a geological fault line which cracked an overlying, very friable, limestone rock and erosion did the rest. While I was there, I photographed a minor landslide falling into the river. With the extra weight of the retention lake bearing on the rocks (estimated at 60 billion tonnes), anything can happen, in my opinion. It would not require more than a medium-sized collapse of a mountainside into the lake (and there is plenty of evidence of such collapsing having occurred in the past) to send a massive wave downstream, channeled by the gorge walls, causing an overspill (as has happened elsewhere). The city of Yichiang, with 2 million inhabitants, is just 20 km downstream and there is no way that they could evacuate in the time that an overspill reached the city. If the dam itself gave way completely (and don't tell me that this has never happened!), then the damage downstream would be immeasurable, possibly all the way to the sea, 1,000 km away. I pray that this pessimistic scenario will not happen, but ... it would not be the first time, although never on this scale before. Best regards, Brian Joseph Fjelstad wrote: > > Hi Brian, > > I just returned from Hong Kong and on my next trip will be visiting > Guilin. The world is poised to loose one of its most beautiful visual > treasures due to this controversial and risky venture. Many suggest > that this is a battle with nature that cannot be won. We can only > hope... > > Very best, > Joe