(Redirected from TKM-World Link)

Possible route of Intercontinental Peace Bridge across the Bering Strait.
The 'Bering Strait bridge' or 'Bering Strait tunnel' is a proposed/envisioned bridge or tunnel spanning the
Bering Strait between
Cape Dezhnev,
Chukotka,
Russia, and
Cape Prince of Wales,
Alaska,
United States. The name ''The Intercontinental Peace Bridge'' has been used in some proposals. Such a bridge or tunnel would provide an overland connection linking
Asia,
Africa and
Europe with
North America and
South America. The most recent proposal calls for construction of a tunnel.
The Bering Strait could be spanned by a series of three bridges via the
Diomede Islands for a total distance of about 80 km (50 miles). The two long spans would be comparable in length to the
Lake Pontchartrain Causeway, the current longest bridge.
History
The concept of an overland connection crossing the
Bering Strait goes back at least a century.
William Gilpin, first governor of the
Colorado Territory, envisioned a vast "
Cosmopolitan Railway" in
1890 linking the entire world via a series of railways. Two years later
Joseph Strauss, who went on to design over 400 bridges, including the
Golden Gate Bridge, put forward the first proposal for a Bering Strait railroad bridge in his senior thesis .
Interest was renewed in
1943 with the completion of the
Alaska Highway linking the remote territory of Alaska with the
Continental United States. Ambitious Alaskans envisioned the highway continuing to link with
Nome near the Bering Strait, but no serious proposals for a bridge were made.
In
1968 engineer
T. Y. Lin made a feasibility study of a Bering Strait bridge and estimated a cost more than $4 billion. Like Gilpin, Lin envisioned the project as a symbol of international cooperation and unity. Lin also proposed, among other bridges, a second massive connection spanning the
Strait of Gibraltar. During the
Cold War, however, the concept met mostly with cool reception. Lin died in 2003.
Several others have advocated a Bering Strait bridge including Russian railway engineer
Anatoly Cherkasov soon after the end of the Cold War, and Korean evangelist
Sun Myung Moon as part of a proposed
global highway and rail system.
Challenges
Technical challenges
The route would lie just south of the
Arctic Circle, subject to long, dark winters and extreme weather (average winter lows −20°C with possible lows approaching −50°C.). Winter maintenance of any exposed roadway would be difficult and closures frequent. Even maintenance of enclosed roadways and pipelines could also be affected by winter weather. Ice breakup after each winter is violent and would destroy normal bridge piers. Specially shaped massive piers along the ocean floor would be needed to keep the bridge stable.
The bridge would require thousands of kilometers of new road and/or track over extremely harsh terrain through the wilderness of Alaska and Siberia. The nearest
railheads are
Fairbanks, Alaska or
Jackson, BC on the
Dease Lake branch of
CN on the east and
Yakutsk on the west. Russia is in the process of completing a rail connection from the
Baikal Amur Mainline to Yakutsk. This may prove to be less of a problem, with a binational study going on to see if a rail link from Jackson, BC and Dease Lake, BC or
Fort St. John, BC to Fairbanks, Alaska (via
Whitehorse, Yukon) is feasable
[1].
America and Canada use American
standard gauge (4 feet, 8.5 inches wide) rails, while Russia uses Russian
broad gauge (5 feet wide) tracks, and this will have to be addressed. A
dual-gauge track network has been proposed, as those are used in some areas of
Australia, whose rail network is split into different gauges.
Environmental opposition
Both the Alaskan and Siberian wilderness areas are the focus of major conservation efforts. Access roads would cross thousands of kilometers of these areas. The bridge itself would cross a major whale migration route.
Similar concerns have arisen over the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline and oil and natural gas drilling on the
Alaska North Slope, which remains highly controversial.
There have been long discussions about a highway for the benefit of residents in western Alaska, but environmental concerns and fears of undue cultural influence from a higher number of visitors to
Eskimo villages have obstructed these plans.
Economic costs and benefits
The Bering Strait area is extremely remote and sparsely populated. Air is the main mode of travel in the area, and across the strait there are very few chartered flights by small private airlines such as Bering Air, located in Nome. There is no existing car or rail
ferry service as there are no roads or railways for it to serve.
Based on the price per kilometer of other long bridges, the cost for a road bridge itself can be estimated at $15-25 billion. Discovery Channel's Extreme Engineering estimates the cost of a highway, double track rail and pipelines, including continuations on land, at $105 billion. This excludes the cost of new roads and railways to reach the bridge.
International bridges and tunnels in Europe have been financed by loans and road fees only, since there is a political principle that international travel should not be paid by tax payers. Possible sources of these fees include container traffic between Russia/China and Canada/U.S., which could make the transit much more quickly by rail than by crossing the Pacific Ocean, and passenger traffic from as far away as the UK to Canada and the U.S. A bridge which also carried pipelines would earn revenues from the use of those pipelines. Potential income from these sources is unknown.
Alternatives
Assuming that the necessary access routes are in place, alternatives to a Bering Strait bridge include:
★ Car/rail ferry service in summer months.
★ An
immersed tube or
tunnel.
Bering Strait tunnel
A tunnel crossing the
Bering Strait would be roughly 64 miles (110 kilometers) long, making it the longest tunnel in the world. It would be an element of a railway joining
Yakutsk, the capital of the
Russian Yakutia republic, rich in natural materials, with the western coast of
Alaska.
For the comparison, as of 2007, the 50 km long
Channel Tunnel is the longest tunnel of this type.
The 'TKM-World Link' is a planned link between
Siberia and
Alaska in order to provide oil, natural gas, and electricity to the
United States and
Canada from
Russia. The plan includes provisions to build a 64 mile (103 km) tunnel under the
Bering Strait which, if completed, would become the longest tunnel in the world. The tunnel should be profitable 13-15 years after construction.
History
A connection between
Asia and
North America has long been a dream of many, because of the relatively short distance between the two continents at the Bering Strait. Russia first had plans of building a tunnel in the strait in 1905, when
Tsar Nicholas II approved a plan to do so. However, the outbreak of
World War I and Russia's involvement ended any hopes for a tunnel.
Plan
The Russian plan for the TKM-World Link involves creating a 6,000 km (3,700 mi) route through Siberia to facilitate and speed up economic ties between the U.S. and Russia. A pipeline will be created to transport natural gas and oil, which are produced in abundance in Siberia.
References
★
The Bering Strait Crossing" by James A. Oliver out now in paperback ISBN 0954699564
★
Russians dream of tunnel to Alaska.
★
Russia Plans World's Longest Tunnel, a Link to Alaska
★
Russia Considering Tunnel Between Asia and North America
See also
★
Bering land bridge
★
Gibraltar Tunnel
★
Channel Tunnel
★
Cosmopolitan Railway
★
Trans Global Highway
External links
★
Discovery Channel's ''Extreme Engineering''
★
Alaska History Society Article
★
World Peace King Tunnel
★
The Trans-Earth Skyway System
★
Trans-Global Highway
★
The Global Railway
★
The Bering Strait Crossing
★
Russians dream of tunnel to Alaska. BBC News. 2001
★
Russia Plans World's Longest Tunnel Bloomberg News, April 18, 2007