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China-Japan-Koreas |
China - Flyash Liberation Army has new rival: Corrosive Sea Sand |
2013-03-18 |
![]() Work on a slew of major projects in the southern Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen has been abruptly suspended following reports that the concrete used for their construction was made from cheap, unprocessed sea sand. emphasis on cheapThe Shenzhen Housing and Construction Bureau held an emergency news conference on March 15 to announce that it had launched a full-scale investigation into the practice. Their investigations have thus far established that 15 of the 92 concrete-mixing plants in Shenzhen used untreated sea sand as a raw material in concrete which had been sold to local developers. oops The use of unprocessed sea sand as a raw material in concrete is considered highly hazardous due to the large amounts of salt and chloride it contains, which can corrode steel reinforcements and lead to the collapse of entire buildings. "Say goodbye, rebar" |
Posted by:Frank G |
#5 If you're that sure about the Melamine Milk thing... I have thought, in my more paranoid moments, that that was their way of keeping the "wrong" people from buying their kids milk and a corresponding IQ boost. |
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain 2013-03-18 22:45 |
#4 I suspect this was a corner-cutting measure devised by suppliers because of a lack of government regulation. Kind of like the melamine milk imbroglio. |
Posted by: Zhang Fei 2013-03-18 22:39 |
#3 I assume that's a five year plan, Joe? |
Posted by: Frank G 2013-03-18 21:44 |
#2 Lest we fergit, despite their on-going problems wid defective Civil-Contruction Engineering, China desires to proceed full speed ahead wid a post-Three Gorges, World's-largest dam project that is said could de facto slow down the rotation of the planet we like to call Earth??? And exclusive of any US-vs-Rising-China"Peak Oil/Resources" issues. This will not end well. |
Posted by: JosephMendiola 2013-03-18 20:01 |
#1 Salt doesn't help the chemical processes in concrete either...you can easily break it up with a hammer (or a small earthquake). |
Posted by: tipover 2013-03-18 16:58 |