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Panama Canal: GUPC starts flooding of the upper levels of new locksPanama Canal: GUPC starts flooding of the upper levels of new locks

The process of flooding of the new locks on the Pacific and the Atlantic entrance of the Panama Canal, is starting this week as the consortium building the third set of locks said it will begin filling the upper levels.

Michele Labrut, Americas Correspondent

July 27, 2015

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Grupo Unidos por el Canal (GUPC)said the flooding of each sector can take between three to four months and flooding each chamber between four to ten days.
 
"Flooding is a long process, so the test runs of the new locks will last until early 2016," said Giuseppe Quarta, ceo of GUPC.
 
On the Pacific side, the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) provides 40 cu m of water per hour from Lake Miraflores to the interior of the new locks. "The verification of the 8 gates on both the Atlantic and the Pacific sides, have been very successful. On the Atlantic side, we have already started to flood again to test the gates 5 and 6," said Quarta.
 
Last June, water tests began and filling of the lower chamber of the new locks of Agua Clara, at the Atlantic entrance of the waterway, leading to operational testing and quality control of the gates system of the third set of locks for the expanded canal.
 
“Filling the locks with water is the culmination of arduous years of labour and the realisation that we are within arm’s reach of the completion of one of the most impressive infrastructure projects of our time,” said Panama Canal administrator Jorge L.Quijano at the time.

About the Author

Michele Labrut

Americas Correspondent

Michèle Labrut is a long-time Panama resident, a journalist and correspondent, and has continuously covered the maritime sector of Central & Latin America.

Michèle first came to Panama as a press attaché to the French Embassy and then returned to the isthmus as a foreign correspondent in the 1980s.

Author of Seatrade Maritime's annual Panama Maritime Review magazine and of several books, Michèle also wrote for Time magazine, The Miami Herald, NBC News and the Economist Intelligence Unit. She has also collaborated in making several documentaries for the BBC and European and U.S. television networks.

Michèle's profession necessitates a profound knowledge of the country, but her acumen is not from necessity alone, but a genuine passion for Panama.

In 2012 she was awarded the Order of Merit (Knight grade) by the French Government for her services to international journalism and in 2021 the upgrade to Chevalier grade.

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