NASA concerned about China’s latest plan: Could change Earth’s rotation

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Published On: February 22, 2025
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Earth's rotation is affected.

NASA raises concerns over China’s Three Gorges Dam, which has slightly changed the rotation of the Earth. Although designed for both energy and flood control, its enormous displacement of water poses a significant impact.

The Three Gorges Dam in China is affecting the planet

The Three Gorges Dam is 185 m tall and stretches 2.3 km across the Yangtze River, making it the world’s largest hydroelectric power station. Its construction was completed in 2012 and was meant to provide renewable energy, control flooding, and improve navigation along one of China’s most significant rivers.

It holds nearly 39.3 billion cubic meters of water at full capacity and generates enough electricity to power millions of homes. The dam has been acclaimed for its role in energy production and economic growth, but it has also faced criticism.

Environmentalists have long pointed to habitat destruction, the displacement of more than a million people, and increased seismic activity as reasons to be concerned. Now, NASA has added another impact to the list, one that spans across China’s borders and into planetary physics.

NASA confirms that the Three Gorges Dam is changing Earth’s rotation

NASA’s research indicates that the total volume of water now held by the Three Gorges Dam’s reservoir has altered the distribution of Earth’s mass. This makes a significant difference in the planet’s moment of inertia, which in turn slightly slows the rotation of Earth. The dam has prolonged the length of a day by 0.06 microseconds, according to calculations. This means that it is just sixteen millionths of a second, too tiny of a shift for humans to detect.

However, it is still a measurable effect, which shows that human activities can affect the physical dynamics of our planet. Though this shift is tiny, it raises an important question: Will similar projects in the future lead to much larger changes?

A subtle alteration with massive implications

The physics of this phenomenon is straightforward. The speed of Earth’s rotation (just like how China has slowed Earth’s rotation) is affected by the distribution of its mass. This is an example of the conservation of angular momentum, the same kind of physics that explains why a figure skater spins faster when pulling in their arms and slows down when they stretch them out.

The water of the Three Gorges Dam is stored in a faraway reservoir from the Earth’s rotational axis. By focusing such a massive amount of water in a single spot, the dam serves like a skater spreading their arms, slightly decreasing the speed of their spin.

This is not the only occurrence where human activities have impacted the planet’s rotation. Other large-scale projects, like the extraction of groundwater, the creation of artificial reservoirs, and even the melting of polar ice, are also contributing to mass shifts that affect the rotation of the Earth.

The effect on Earth’s rotation from the Three Gorges Dam is minuscule, but scientists are thinking of the bigger implications. What if other massive projects around the globe kept reshaping mass distribution? Will their collective effects soon be felt?

Earth’s balance is already being affected by climate change. As polar ice melts, water is redistributed around the globe in large amounts, affecting Earth’s rotational speed. Although we are far from experiencing extreme changes, scientists are still tracking the shifts that have accumulated over decades or centuries.

The dam’s impact also serves as a reminder that human engineering can exert enough power to change the dynamics of the planet itself. As nations anticipate expensive projects to reshape the land, including artificial islands and mega dams, we need to consider: What is too much change?

NASA’s discoveries about the Three Gorges Dam show how human construction projects can affect Earth in surprising ways. A small but measurable 0.06-microsecond increase in the length of a day (just like this hydroelectric dam that increases the lengths of days) is a reminder that large-scale engineering is not just an environmental issue, it’s a planetary one. Although this effect is not something to worry about now, it emphasizes how entangled human actions and natural forces can be.