Poster's note : slightly off topic? But big enough to count as
geoengineering, maybe.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0011916414006754

Desalination
16 March 2015, Vol.360:1–7, doi:10.1016/j.desal.2014.12.028

Assessing the impacts of nuclear desalination and geoengineering to address
China's water shortages

Anne-Perrine Avrin
Gang He
Daniel M. Kammen

Highlights

•China will have enough nuclear power by 2030 to eradicate water scarcity.
•Nuclear desalination would be affordable even for the poorest Chinese
households.
•It emits hundreds of times less CO2 than the STNWTP and coal desalination.
•Nuclear desalination should be used to supply water to the coastal demand
centers.
•Water supply from STNWTP should be limited to remote provinces.

Abstract

Critical assessment of mega-projects is emerging as a much-needed
discipline in an era when, in many places, resource demands exceed
environmental capacity. This techno-economic study, using the Desalination
Economic Evaluation Program developed by the International Atomic Energy
Agency, shows that by 2030, China will have the capacity to produce 23.1
billion m3 of water annually, at $0.86/m3, as a co-product of electricity
generation through nuclear power, provided that the country favors
desalination over water diversion. We calculate that the resulting water
production and supply chain needed to eradicate absolute scarcity for 0.16
billion people will cost between $0.99/m3 and $1.79/m3, and we prove that
this will be affordable, even for the poorest inhabitants. We then compare
both coal and nuclear desalination with the currently planned South–North
Water Transfer Mega-Project and show that, while the short-run cost of
water diversion is lower, critical vulnerabilities and future resource
demands favor nuclear desalination.

Keywords

China
Nuclear desalination
Water scarcity
Economic analysis
South North Water Transfer Project

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