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South China Sea: Beijing resources ministry gauges depth of new Vietnamese port on reef

Chinese government study says laser satellite data reveals harbour deep enough for advanced warships on largest reef in the Spratly Islands

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Barque Canada Reef, pictured in May 2024, is Vietnam’s largest outpost. Hanoi’s expanded presence is being studied by China’s natural resources ministry which is reporting on a new harbour on the reef. Photo: CSIS/AMTI
Stephen Chenin Beijing
Vietnam has dramatically expanded its presence on Barque Canada Reef through a three-year land-reclamation project enabling large warships to sail into the harbour, according to a study by China’s Ministry of Natural Resources.

The research combines laser measurements from Nasa’s ICESat-2 satellite with optical data from the European Union’s Sentinel-2 to map underwater changes with unprecedented precision. The team’s peer-reviewed paper was published in the Chinese-language Journal of Tropical Oceanography on February 13.

Barque Canada Reef is the largest landform in the Spratly Islands, an archipelago in the South China Sea that is claimed by several nations and is known in China as the Nansha Islands.

According to the paper, the research revealed that Vietnam had dredged a 299-metre (980-foot) wide channel reaching an average depth of 11.37 metres leading into the strategic harbour at the western tip of Barque Canada Reef, which is known in China as Bai Jiao.

The channel is deep enough to accommodate some of the world’s largest warships, such as China’s largest Type 055 destroyers that have a 6.6-metre draught, according to openly available information.

From 2022 to 2024, reclaimed land at the reef expanded tenfold to 1.94 sq km (0.75 square miles), placing concrete over coral flats, according to the study.

“These data [are] conclusive proof that Vietnam’s land-reclamation projects, coupled with the excavation of navigation channels and harbour construction, have profoundly reshaped Bai Jiao Reef’s topography, triggering drastic geomorphological alterations across the island complex,” wrote study co-author Fu Dongyang, of Guangdong Ocean University.

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