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Ships Cross Two Oceans While Rising Up To 26 Meters, Passing Through 304.8-Meter Chambers and Highlighting the Critical Point of the Panama Canal: The Use of Approximately 200 Million Liters of Freshwater Per Transit

Written by Noel Budeguer
Published on 19/12/2025 at 08:26
Descubra por que navios sobem até cerca de 26 metros no Canal do Panamá e como isso exige volumes gigantes de água doce
Uma câmara de eclusa com 33,53 m de largura e 304,8 m de comprimento move navios gigantes sem bombas, só com gravidade
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The Mechanism That Connects The Atlantic To The Pacific Depends On Artificial Lakes, Gravity, And Large Volumes Of Freshwater, Making The Canal Sensitive To Droughts

The Panama Canal is one of the most strategic infrastructures in global trade and allows the passage of ships between the Atlantic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean through a lock system.

Each complete passage consumes, on average, about 200 million liters of freshwater, a volume released from the reservoirs that supply the canal and that does not return to the system after use.

What Happened And Why It Got Noticed

In recent years, reduced rainfall has affected the levels of the lakes that supply the canal, primarily the Gatun Lake, responsible for a large part of the water used in the locks.

With lower levels, the number of daily passages had to be reduced, directly impacting trade routes, logistical deadlines, and costs of international maritime transport.

Aerial Image Reveals The Locks Of The Panama Canal, The Reservoirs That Store Millions Of Liters Of Freshwater, And The Channels That Allow The Passage Of Ships Between Two Oceans

How The Lock System Works In Practice

The canal uses sets of stair-step locks, which function as concrete chambers with giant metal doors.

Each chamber is approximately 33 meters wide, 305 meters long, and allows ships to be raised or lowered in stages up to about 26 meters above sea level, a height corresponding to Gatun Lake.

The movement occurs only with the control of the flow of water, which enters or exits the chambers by gravity, with no use of pumps.

Why The Canal Depends On Freshwater And Not Seawater

The system was designed to operate with freshwater stored in artificial lakes, formed by dams built early in the 20th century.

Seawater is not used because the operation depends on elevated reservoirs, something unfeasible with saltwater due to corrosion, environmental impact, and the need for precise control of water levels in the chambers.

The Impact Of Water Consumption On Maritime Traffic

The water released in the locks flows toward the oceans and is not reused in the older structures of the canal.

This means that drought periods directly reduce operational capacity. In critical situations, the canal limits the number of ships per day and imposes draft restrictions, forcing vessels to carry less cargo to cross.

YouTube Video

What Changes With The More Modern Locks

The locks inaugurated with the canal’s expansion incorporated water reuse basins, capable of reusing up to 60% of the volume used in each passage.

This system significantly reduces total consumption and has become one of the main strategies to maintain operation even in scenarios of lower water availability.

The lock system of the Panama Canal combines large-scale engineering, gravity, and water management, allowing ships to cross two oceans without the need for pumping.

The high consumption of freshwater explains why the canal has become vulnerable to drought periods and emphasizes the importance of technical solutions to ensure the continuity of one of the most important routes in global trade.

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Noel Budeguer

Sou jornalista argentino baseado no Rio de Janeiro, com foco em energia e geopolítica, além de tecnologia e assuntos militares. Produzo análises e reportagens com linguagem acessível, dados, contexto e visão estratégica sobre os movimentos que impactam o Brasil e o mundo. 📩 Contato: noelbudeguer@gmail.com

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