Yahoo – AFP,
Nicolas Delaunay, 6 Oct 2015
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| An image made available by Deltares on October 5, 2015, shows the world's biggest man-made wave machine under construction in Delft in 2015 (AFP Photo) |
Delft
(Netherlands) (AFP) - In a country where most people live below sea level,
studying the oceans is a matter of survival. Now Dutch scientists have created
the world's biggest man-made wave in a bid to prepare for the worst.
"Here
we can test what happens if enormous waves hit our dykes," said Dutch
Infrastructure Minister Melanie Schultz van Haegen as she inaugurated the giant
wave machine Monday in the city of Delft.
Dubbed the
"Delta Flume," the machine, which took three years to build at the
Deltares institute, can send waves as high as five metres (15 feet) crashing
down a 300-metre long channel which is some 9 and a half metres deep.
"At
the end of the long channel we have a wave maker, and that's basically a
vertical wall that moves back and forth, and it can make very large
waves," explained Bas Hofland, an expert in coastal defences working on
the project.
Four
powerful pistons behind the seven-metre high metal plaque push the water --
some nine million litres or four times the capacity of an Olympic-size swimming
pool -- at the speed of 1,000 litres a second down the channel.
The aim of
the 26-million euro ($29-million) project is to simulate the power of the
oceans, and recreate tsunami conditions to help build better, stronger flood
defences.
The
Netherlands is a country where half the population lives below sea level on
reclaimed land.
"Safety
against floods is one of the main issues here in the Netherlands, so we want to
test the dykes and the dunes," Hofland told AFP.
"It is
not possible to make it at a small scale, so we must have real life-scale dikes
and dunes."
Surf's up
After a
centuries-long battle with the oceans, the Netherlands has dubbed itself the
"safest delta in the world" thanks to a unique network of dykes and
dunes stretching over thousands of kilometres, which literally hold back the
tides.
One of
them, known as the Oosterscheldekering (or Eastern Scheldt storm surge
barrier), stretches across nine kilometres (five miles) to the south of the
country.
It is made
up of 64 gates, each about 42 metres wide, which can be closed during stormy
weather to hold back rising waters.
"The
water and its logistics are those sectors for which the Netherlands is known
around the world," Schultz van Haegen said, who saw for herself the full
force of the machine when she was drenched by one of the waves.
And it's
not just those working in coastal defences who have been drawn to the gigantic
project in Delft.
The team at
the Deltares institute have also been flooded by requests from surfers, keen to
try out the power of the wave.

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