Comment by darkengine
5 years ago
What I found most interesting about this article is Singapore's practice of buying an incredible amount of sand and using it to make more Singapore.
I made sure to read the cited source because this claim sounded way too similar to some past Wikipedia edit pranks.
Other examples from Florida, where Miami spends millions to replenish its beaches:
https://bpr.berkeley.edu/2018/03/29/floridas-sand-gone-with-...
And there are some interesting legal ramifications w.r.t importing sand from foreign sources:
https://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0516/p01s03-ussc.html
http://www.harvarddesignmagazine.org/issues/39/built-on-sand... there are a lot of great articles on Singapore. Their entire economy ultimately rests on non-stop construction. Being an island, this would eventually stop, unless they continually expand! So expand, via sand, they do.
https://www.smh.com.au/world/sand-wars-singapores-growth-com...
I selfishly hope that the practice gets banned so that Singapore is forced to figure out how to engineer floating cities (they have the skill set!)
Wouldn’t that have a very different effect with regard to the country’s borders? The sovereign zone wouldn’t get extended for a large flagging dock/boat I wouldn’t think.
Maybe they could build underwater on the sea-floor?
Unless I'm missing something here, doesn't that make sense (in the sense of the theft)? That the country would buy the sand to expand its territory?
Sand Property is Sand Theft. Also, in the case of Singapore, not all of it was used to make Singapore larger, some was used to resurface Marina Bay (formerly muddy) with nice clean sand, so it could act as a strategic freshwater reserve
I've never understood how they got the existing salt out of the water in the bay there after they completed the dam. Is that clear to you?
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You don't need sharp river sand for landfill. You can dredge regular sand from anywhere
Yeah, we could just dredge sand from poisoned seabeds around oil platforms with insufficient pollution controls.
Building on garbage dumps might not be the worst strategy, if it can be made safe? Garbage has to be dumped somewhere anyway?
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