The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Why Should Northern China Worry About Flooding? || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: August 16, 2023If you're thinking, "There's no way China's situation could possibly get worse," you may need to talk to mother nature about the rains and typhoons causing flooding in northern China. Full Newslette...r: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/why-should-northern-china-worry-about-flooding
Transcript
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Hey everybody, Peter Zine here, coming to you from the Golden Banner Trail above Ken Carl,
which is a suburb of the Denver Metroplex.
Today we're going to talk about water, specifically all the water that northern China has gotten of late.
They had heavy spring and summer rains, and they just got hit by a typhoon,
and so there's significant flooding through Beijing.
It's already killed a few dozen people.
The key thing to remember about China is a lot of its government structures are a direct outcome of its geography.
So the North China plain where the Han ethnicity basically has its core of power
is a big wide open area that is both drought and flood prone.
The drought is normal climatic stuff.
This is a semi-arid region maybe roughly akin to a cooler version of central Texas or maybe central Nebraska.
But instead of having kind of braided rivers that flow through it,
it's cool.
We've got one single mighty river, the yellow, that originates significantly upstream.
a couple thousand miles away,
that drains an absolutely massive watershed
at an area that is a soil type called the Loess,
which is wind-driven soils, very fine particulates.
And that means when this dry zone,
a lot of it's actually desert, does get rain.
Most of it runs off.
It carries a lot of silt with it,
and that's why the Yellow River has its name.
The silt is yellow.
By the time you get downstream
to where everyone lives in the North China Plain,
it's a raging torrent,
but it's a raging torrent with lots of,
lots and lots and lots of sediment.
Now, if you can capture that sentiment and kind of like the flood dry that you had in, say, Egypt or the America and Midwest, you get incredibly productive farmland.
But that requires you growing things like corn and wheat and the rest. China's a rice country.
Water management's very important.
Rice has to have very specific watering conditions at every stage of its production.
Otherwise, the crop is lost.
Now, Northern China, they don't grow rice anymore, but after 2,500 years of growing rice,
that has set certain things into motion.
Specifically, they have to be able to control the river,
otherwise the water will come or be not there at the time of its choosing,
rather than the Chinese people's choosing.
That requires a lot more organization at the state level,
which tends to generate a stronger hand in terms of government
and a requirement that you have everybody under a single house politically.
Otherwise, various factions will just attack the waterworks
and destroy whatever the hostile power has.
happens to be. Fast forward that 2,500 years. Wrestling the river into shape means basically
building ginormous dikes down the entirety of its length for the entirety of civilized
northern China. That means the silt has nowhere to go. So in the Midwest, one of the
problems that we've seen after just 150 years of trying to do this strategy on the Mississippi
is you get silt on the bottom of the riverbed that raises the lever of water so that when one of
those dikes does break, it floods an entire area. So a big thing that the Army
car of engineers have been doing over the last decade is leveling some of those
dikes and we're turning some of the land to wetlands just to absorb the flood flows.
This is at least two orders of magnitude more significant in the case of China because you're
talking about the most dense human population footprint in the country.
And we're going to rotate a little so you can see why I like this so much.
See that over there?
There. That is Red Rock's amphitheater. So if you ever want to see a good show in Dendor, go there.
I got a great view of downtown to the sunsets.
Anyway, what this means now is that in China, you've got two and a half millennia of sediment.
And so every time there's a flood, it threatens the entire dike system.
And if you have a break somewhere, it's much big of a problem than you have in Mississippi,
because after two and a half millennia of heavy sediment, the floor of the river, in many cases,
now above the ground level, the surprising of the surrounding lands,
meaning those dikes are two, maybe even three stories above the cities,
and if they break the entire course of the river, you know,
river goes by the path of least resistance,
crashes down into the populated zones.
Now, that hasn't happened this year.
I'm not saying it's going to.
I'm saying that the Chinese really didn't finish their dikes system
to the current level of absurdity until just about 10, 15 years ago.
They used to have floods regularly.
They would kill hundreds, if not thousands of people.
And in today's environment,
where the Chinese are facing every possible problem under the sun with their finance,
their economy, and their demographics, this is just one more thing you have to factor in,
because when this breaks and physics tells us in time, it will,
they're going to lose significant portions of some of their most advanced infrastructure,
not to mention lots and lots of people.
So whenever you see it raining west of Beijing, pay attention,
because it matters a very great deal.
All right.
Take care.
