Saudi Arabia Is Building The World's Largest Artificial River In The Desert

Published 2024-02-15
Saudi Arabia has a water problem it's trying to solve by building the world's largest artificial river in the desert. This gigantic mega project is already under and costs a staggering $500 million dollars. Why is Saudi Arabia trying to build this giant artificial river mega project, what will they use it for and how exactly are they going to build it? Today we look at the insane engineering behind the project and if it will actually work.
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All Comments (21)
  • @sleeplessstu
    A “River” ? An underground pipe sounds more like a “pipeline” to me…
  • @scottfoster2487
    This will work as long as you add forests to reduce winds and help provide conservation of the aquafer.
  • @m0d1f1c8tor
    One question. What happens to the enormous quantity of brine produced as the byproduct of desalination?
  • Fun fact: Libya now currently has the worlds largest man made underground rivers. 🇱🇾
  • @mrXOwarrior
    Was this written by the Saudi marketing department?
  • This is more profitable to humanity than spending money on weapons for destruction of humanity championed
  • @JoshWalker62
    Why does every Middle Eastern country go for the world's largest?
  • @boothvrstudio
    Pretty cool! Glad to see Saudi Arabia is a leader in desalination! California could benefit from mirroring those systems.
  • Not mentioned most of the project has already been completed and operational now 🤲. Alhamdulillah
  • @stickynorth
    Amazing and impressive? Yes! Sustainable? That's still debatable... If its solar powered and using advanced water conservation techniques? Then yes! If it's oil powered, wastes water and doesn't use industry best practices? Then it's a fool's errand... Hopefully it's more of the former and less of the latter...
  • Where does the brine go? Usually they pump it back into the ocean where its very bad for sealife.
  • @jeffdeharris5492
    Now, if Saudi Arabia starts planting Mangrove forests on their coasts, build more Solar plants to produce all their electricity, using the brine from the saline convertion as energy storage, they might be up to something. But this pipeline system is NOT a river. Misleading title.
  • @51Sable
    Video shows a trench for laying two pipeline, but still talking about "river". These would be networks of pipelines, built around KSA to deliver water for agriculture. Lybia already has similar networks, unless USA bombed them.
  • @lavolpe71
    Take the energy from massive solar plants, and lay the brine in big pools in the desert to produce salt as the last water evaporate. You get return on investment when you become net exporter of salt while at the same time not puttign the brine back to the sea, destroying eco systems with too salty water.
  • This country is addressing the most important problem in this world - that of lack of fresh water!!!
  • @devon9075
    Desalination on this scale will result in the production of an enormous volume of brine. The diagrams showed the filtrate coming out of the processes, but the other fraction, known as retentate is typically 40-60% of the total volume. As you attempt to reduce the retentate volume (thereby increasing the salt concentration), you non-linearly increase the energy demand on the RO system. So they will be dumping all this brine back into the environment, and there will be consequences. I don't mean to suggest they can't or shouldn't do this.. I understand that this strategy enables millions to flourish in Saudia Arabia. I would like to see some acknowledgement of the donwsies as well as hear their plans to mitigate those impacts (if any).