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Slurry pipeline
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==Planned projects== One of the longest slurry pipelines was to be the proposed ETSI pipeline, to transport coal from Wyoming to Louisiana over a distance of 1036 miles (1675 km). It was never commissioned. It is anticipated that in the next few years some long distance slurry pipelines will be constructed in Australia and South America where mineral deposits are often a few hundred kilometers away from shipping ports. A 525 km slurry pipeline is planned for the [[Minas-Rio]] iron ore mine in [[Brazil]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bnamericas.com/project-profile/en/Minas-Rio-Minas-Rio|access-date=2010-12-12|title=Project Profiles, Minas-Rio|date=2010-12-12}}</ref> Slurry pipelines are also being considered to desilt or remove silts from deposits behind dams in man-made lakes. After the [[Hurricane Katrina]] disaster there were proposals to remedy the environment by pumping silt to the shore. Proposals have also been made to de-silt [[Lake Nasser|Lake Nubia-Nasser]] in [[Egypt]] and [[Sudan]] by slurry pipelines, as Egypt is now deprived of 95% of its [[alluvium]], which used to arrive every year. These projects to remedy the environment might alleviate one of the major problems associated with large dams and man-made lakes. [[ESSAR Steel India Limited]] owns two >250 km slurry pipelines in India; the Kirandul-Vishakhapatnam (slurry pipeline) and Dabuna-Paradeep pipeline.
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