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Transportation United States Technology

Epic Mega Bridge To Connect America With Russia Gets Closer To Reality 465

Sepa Blackforesta writes: A plan for an epic bridge connecting Russia's easternmost border with Alaska's westernmost border could soon be a reality, as Russia seeks to partner with China. Sijutech reports: "If this mega bridge come to reality, it would be Planet Earth’s most epic mega-road trip ever. The plans have not been officially accepted since specific details of the highway still need to be discussed, including the large budget. Allegedly the plan will cost upwards in the trillions of dollars range."
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Epic Mega Bridge To Connect America With Russia Gets Closer To Reality

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  • by skovnymfe ( 1671822 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:35AM (#50234101)
    Why build one... when you can build two for twice the price!?
    • Why build one... when you can build two for twice the price!?

      Americans seem to have some kind of habit doing that. Often when I go to Amazon to check some reviews, for example for a computer or a portable heater, there's always comments like "great product, have to grab a couple of more". It certainly is not always obvious to me why the reviewer would need the extra units.

      • Re:Why build one (Score:4, Insightful)

        by TWX ( 665546 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @01:10PM (#50234783)
        I find reviews for most durable goods that include the suggestion of purchasing more to be suspect unless the reviewer illustrates why they would need more than one. Makes me wonder if the seller has signed up with a fake reviewer service to try to bump up the ratings.
        • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

          Honestly this was never a red flag for me, but now it will be. If I get some cool house thing, I'll often buy one for my mom, but I can't imagine that is so common as to cause all those reviews.

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        You can't understand why someone would want more than one portable heater?

        I understand that one is more than sufficient for your 10x15 "apartment" in your mom's basement, but can you look past your own needs for a moment and consider that the needs of others may be different?

  • but this is nuts

    if the cost is {Y}

    and the profit per year is {X}

    then 500 years * {X} = {Y} roughly

    the cost, including building the roads/ rails to get to the bridge, greatly dwarfs, by many orders of magnitude, the quantity of commerce that would flow

    finally, compare the cost to your average container ship fees and where you want to ship it

    waiting for a many century payoff is not wise

    someday, in only a few decades maybe the way technology and world populations are going, then the scheme would realize a prof

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by iTrawl ( 4142459 )

      To recoup their investment as early as possible they'll allow traffic on sections of the bridge as soon as each is ready.

  • by Max_W ( 812974 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:39AM (#50234113)
    This is the project which is be done. But the problem is the littleness of current thinking.

    Not only from London to New York, but from London to Hanoi. It is doable, it will create millions of sustainable jobs.
  • Soon. Very soon. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:44AM (#50234155) Journal

    A plan for an epic bridge connecting Russia's easternmost border with Alaska's westernmost border could soon be a reality,

    When asked to explain what is meant by, "soon", the Sijutech spokesman clarified, soon, for very large values of soon.

  • This project just isn't going to happen anytime soon. The United States and Russia both appreciate the security of the Bering Straight and a few thousand miles of wilderness separating their main population centers, first of all. Second, the cost of connecting the thousands of miles of roads or rail needed, plus the cost of the bridge, plus the cost of the upkeep of said roads and bridges, will never be recouped by the savings of not shipping via air/ship at current fuel prices. Third, it still isn't even c
    • Exactly right. The wilderness on either side of the bridge is vast. It is vast because it is really hard to build roads over permafrost, particularly if the permafrost starts to melt whenever you build a road on it. Roads on permafrost pretty much need to be rebuilt every year. The bridge is a big effort, but the roads to reach it might be a bigger project. It would be the bridge to nowhere, from nowhere.

  • Hasn't anyone seen 'Red Dawn' ?

  • Not going to happen (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Karmashock ( 2415832 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:52AM (#50234195)

    Why would the west give Russia leverage? We saw them try to exploit the pathetic hold they had on us with the international space station. A diplomatic project we put in place mostly to make the russians feel good... and they tried to fuck us with the olive branch.

    We have an existing and quite inexpensive container ship network. Is this rail project going to be cheaper than that? Doubtful and less flexible... and most problematic going through Russian territory which means Russia gets leverage.

    I'd be surprised if they got the funding for this... the Chinese might pay for it but who is going to build the US/Canadian leg of it? Because we're not letting Russian or Chinese labor in to do it and that means paying an American/Canadian construction firm... and who is going to do that.

    Look, if the politics weren't so shitty, I'd say "fine"... it might make some sense. But the politics are not only shitty but getting shittier all the time.

    The US State Department has already effectively admitted that we're in the a second cold war with the Russians. Blood is getting pumped back into old Cold War organs, programs, and operations. In the article cited it points out that Russia is dealing with sanctions from the "West"... aka the US. And they think building a rail road to the US is going to give them independence from US sanctions? How?

    The only way I can see that happening is if the US gets addicted to the train network and finds it impractical to maintain sanctions given that the train goes through Russia. Which is basically just another reason for the US to quietly slit this idea's throat and move on.

    Look Russia... If you want to do business with the US, you need to make people like me happy. I know... you don't like that... but that's reality.

    And here's what I'm going to need:

    1. Surrender all claims to the Eastern European countries that don't want to join your club.

    2. Embrace and accept the missile shield concept. We'll cut you in so you can have the same tech and maintain parity with us for missile defense. What we want is to make the ICBM obsolete. Help us do that and we'll see that you gain the same advantage.

    3. Stop doing your best to troll US foreign policy by giving nuclear tech to the Iranians and similar nonsense. Its very obvious what you're doing and it is not appreciated.

    4. Stop trying to use anyone's dependence on something you provide to get leverage in politics. Its a serious problem when the Germans trust you for fuel and then you threaten to cut them off if NATO doesn't play ball. You've done the same thing with various eastern european countries as well. And the whole thing with jacking up the launch costs or saying you might not take US astronauts to the space station was a test... and you fucking failed. We gave you an opportunity to stab us in the back of the thigh with a butter knife just to see what you'd do... and you fucking did it. How can we trust you with anything that could potentially give you leverage over us if you'll exploit even the most f'ing meaningless pressure points to gain laughable advantages?

    Russia does this and relations between the US and Russia can be very good. Investment, cooperation, access to markets, access to technology... fucking milk and honey. We'll help them develop their resources and find them a market for it. We'll make them rich.

    But that's all contingent on them not being assholes. And that's never happening.

    • by NatasRevol ( 731260 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:31PM (#50234479) Journal

      Russia's demands:

      Get your fucking military out of half the world's countries.

      • The vast majority of places we are... we are there with the consent of those governments.

        If this is legitimately Russia's desire, it is similar for their request that we help Russia re-enslave eastern europe. That's Russia's big complaint. "hey hey America... those are MY slaves... don't go giving them weapons or the ability to defend themselves."

        To which we have generally told Russia to go fuck itself with a rake.

        And here is something the Russians can start looking forward to:
        https://www.youtube.com/watch? [youtube.com]

        • We don't want it. We want Russia poor, isolated, and backward until they break.

          They 'we' are inhumane assholes.

          • Why? I mean... anyone can say a thing.

            I'll show you...

            You are a space hamster after my sweet broccoli.

            See?

            Substantiate your position please.

      • by smugfunt ( 8972 )

        Get your fucking military out of half the world's countries.

        More like three-quarters [wikipedia.org].

      • Russia's demands:

        Get your fucking military out of half the world's countries.

        ... so that it will be easier for Russia to take them over. Yes, Putin would love that.

    • We have an existing and quite inexpensive container ship network.

      To put this in perspective, consider that if you drive a mile to the store to pick up a toothbrush, you just spent more in transportation costs than it took to get the toothbrush from a factory in China to the store where you bought it. Shipping is really, really efficient.

      • exactly... the russian rail project is of marginal value under the best of circumstances. And Russia's behavior means we don't want to do anything with them. We want their economy to collapse. We want their asian neighbors to nibble at their borders. We want their military hardware to rust into uselessness. We want their tech to become hopelessly outdated.

        This is not what we wanted until fairly recently. But... Putin wants to restart the cold war... Fine.

    • And we're in a cyberwar with China, it's just that the American government hasn't realized it yet.
      • not really... the chinese are opportunists... they're exploiting pathetic security policy in the US. I mean, if you leave your fly down can you blame people for looking?

        I don't blame the chinese for that. That's on us.

    • We have an existing and quite inexpensive container ship network. Is this rail project going to be cheaper than that?

      Container ships are cheaper than rail [tenntom.org]. Their disadvantage is the labor-intensive step of loading and unloading the containers to/from the ship. For a couple hour trip across the English Channel, the loading/unloading cost is disproportionately large compared to the transport cost of the ship, so it makes economic sense to replace it with a tunnel or bridge.

      But for cargo across the Pacif

  • This bridge would cross a plate boundary... It is an earth quake prone area. How long would it survive?
    • Until the next earthquake, and then you fix it. A hell of a lot more straightforward than making something last in the violent and frozen marine environment. I hope there is no metal in it. Or concrete. This thing has to compete with giant ships lumbering across the ocean - it will be a challenge.

  • You are connecting a very, very remote area of Russia with a very, very remote area of the US. Take a look at a population density map [wikimedia.org], there's no cities whatsoever nearby. And long distance shipping will either go by sea (cheaper) or plane (faster), just the maintenance on thousands of miles of rail would kill it. This is as likely as the head of NASA suggesting a manned mission to Mars, it's his idea to make lofty ideas but the people with the money will never fund it.

  • It sounds like a great plan to 'lead technologies', but then you should no longer be thinking of traditional railroad. Might as well go all the way and build a MagLev line, while we are at it.
  • Humans will be looking back and wondering why such an expensive bridge was built for vehicles that are no longer used.
    • Same situation in the Middle Ages after the Roman Empire fell: "Nice Corinthian columns. What were they used for?"
  • Just Google "Baikalâ"Amur Mainline". The project would make sense if Russia and USA were on visa-free travel level good terms, with vibrant urban or industrial centers on both sides of Bering Strait. Think of something like Channel tunnel. But, even in the best political climate, why connect remote areas requiring days of additional road travel to deliver people or goods? Air or sea shipping is the best option until huge changes in demographics of both countries and mutual political ties.

  • Brilliant! (Score:5, Informative)

    by jtownatpunk.net ( 245670 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:16PM (#50234359)

    So they're going to build a bridge from Nowhere, Russia to Nowhere, Alaska. So the 50 people on each end can visit each other, I guess. Because there's in infrastructure in place to get anything of significance to or from either end point of the bridge.

    From an old CNN article: "Relatively isolated even by Alaska standards, no road connects Nome with the rest of the state's road system. About 836 road-less kilometers (520 miles) across desolate terrain separates Nome from the closest major city and road network in Fairbanks, the unofficial northern terminus of the Alaska Highway.

  • Allegedly the plan will cost upwards in the trillions of dollars range.

    It's ok, no need to worry. We'll get government support and we can print the money.

  • Great idea! (Score:5, Funny)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @12:44PM (#50234581) Journal

    But before they do it, I'd like to see them fix the potholes on Elston Avenue.

  • by MountainLogic ( 92466 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @01:00PM (#50234725) Homepage
    This is about as practical as building a space plane to take me from my kitchen to my livingroom. Slow and inefficient rubber tired transit for more than 1/2 around the planet is the biggest waste of a slashdot article let alone the massive physical resources. Modern cargo containers ships are faster, travel more direct, are more all weather, cheaper and gentler on the environment than running trucks on iced over roads. Other than a civil engineer's board imaginations, I can only assume that this is the ultimate attempt of the Serbian chamber of commerce to get a global scale pork barrel project in their backyard. For transportation comparison [tenntom.org]:
    Mode - Miles/Gallon/ton - [Hydrocarbons, CO, NO lbs/ton mile]. .
    Ship - 514 miles/gallon - [0.0009, 0.0020, 0.0053]
    Rail - 202 miles/gallon - [0.0046, 0.0064, 0.0183]
    Truck - 59 miles/gallon - [0.0063, 0.0190, 0.1017]
    Keep in mind that the above does not include the materials, cost or environmental damage to build this road to no where. If you really want a wild road trip drive from Cape Town to Cape Chelyuskin.
    • You'll probably get most of the value out of electronics exports from China to the US that currently go by sea when air transport would be too expensive. How much is that worth and how much more would it be worth if you could get it to consumers how much faster?

      If you can get a 10% increase in price because you have all of China's exports on store shelves a month earlier it could be big bucks. Unlikely to pay off a trillion dollars but anyway.
  • The Russian official allegedly proposing all this is, Vladimir Yakunin [wikipedia.org], is under US Sanctions for the Ukraine/Crimea mess. Moreover it would cost Trillion$, during a time when they don't have $10 Billion to upgrade their air force to their latest fighter: the PAK-FA [wikipedia.org].

    I will not be surprised to find out this is somebody at the Siberian Times idea of a practical joke.

  • Apparently, SOME people are learning from history...and not in a good way.

  • by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @03:57PM (#50235819)
    This project is foolish. how many remote gas stations will be needed to fuel vehicles using such a bridge. who will man and supply these stations and where will their waste go? Driving along and need a toilet? It may be quite a few hours between rest stops. Need a tow truck? I guess that might generate quite a towing bill. Frankly this project will do little if any good for anybody and would be a target for every natural hazard and the terror lunatics would probably enjoy monkey wrenching such a bridge as well.
  • by evilsofa ( 947078 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:06PM (#50236745)
    I have family in Fairbanks that run an industrial business that would inevitably be significantly involved in and enormously impacted by such a project, and I can tell you that there is no talk of or preparation of even the slightest increase in the infrastructure that would be required before this project even began.

    The first phase of an initial inquiry into increasing railroad infrastructure from Alaska to the lower 48, about 10 years ago, rung up an estimate of about a dozen billion dollars; everyone involved did the "let me laugh even harder" dance, and a second phase of the inquiry never happened.

    That short little hop between Nome and Fairbanks is 500 miles of wilderness. There are no roads in the entire western half of Alaska and nobody is talking about building any.
  • I live in AK now and have been to Nome where gas is $6 a gallon

    Why? Because there's no ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE to Nome

    You not only have to build a bridge to one of the most remote parts of the Seward Peninsula - You have to then build an entire road for hundreds of miles down the Seward Peninsula to Fairbanks over land that is varying between Permafrost and regular road - (and you can build for one or the other but the permafrost is changing) - Sure, you could build an "Ice Road" but same situation -

    I'm not saying it's the WORST idea in the world - Anchorage has the 2nd busiest Air Cargo terminal in the US - (Nashville is 1st I think) and we're ideally situated for Air over the North Pole, and maybe Naval thru the Northwest passage, - but there's no Rail line - and no Road from the Seward Peninsula to the Lower 48 - Hell, half the villages out there are still on the honey bucket system. The Bridge would probably come ashore at Wales, and you can drive to Nome - but from there you're back to Cargoship - so will the US create that kind of Infrastructure in AK? We can't even get the broken stuff fixed so I don't foresee new stuff.

    FYI - the Road to Nome has been tossed back and forth but there's no palate in AK right now for new Infrastructure since the budget deficit caused by dropping oil prices.

    RB

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