China has commenced construction of a CNY77.2bn ($11.4bn) expansion of the Three Gorges Dam ship lock system, a project that will nearly double cargo handling capacity at the world's largest hydroelectric facility and ease growing congestion along the Yangtze River — China's most important inland waterway for bulk commodity movement.
Project Details and Capacity
The new lock system, described by Chinese authorities as a giant "water staircase," will feature a 5-stage lock with a 6.68-km two-way channel capable of handling 10,000 dwt class vessels. According to Splash247, construction officially started this week and is scheduled to take nine years to complete. The expansion is part of China's 15th Five-Year Plan and represents the largest infrastructure investment on the Yangtze since the dam entered operation in 2003.
The key capacity metrics, based on source data, are summarized below:
| Metric | Current (2025 Record) | Post-Expansion Target | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual cargo throughput | 173m tonnes | 336m tonnes | ~94% |
| Vessel size accommodated | Not specified | 10,000 dwt | N/A |
Rising Congestion on the Yangtze
The need for expansion has become increasingly urgent as traffic on the Yangtze has outgrown the dam's original design assumptions. According to Splash247, cargo volumes passing through the locks exceeded their 100m-tonne design capacity in 2011 and reached a record 173m tonnes in 2025. Officials from China's Ministry of Transport stated, "The old Three Gorges locks and ship lift have become a chokepoint," noting that planners decades ago had failed to anticipate today's surge in passenger and cargo traffic.
The Yangtze River Economic Belt spans 11 provinces and municipalities, supports nearly half of China's population, and generates more than 40% of national economic output, according to the source. This makes the river corridor critical for the movement of bulk commodities such as coal, iron ore, grain, and containerized goods linking coastal manufacturing hubs with inland provinces.
Implications for Commodity Flows
For commodity traders and logistics operators, the expansion signals a long-term improvement in inland shipping efficiency. Three Gorges Group president Liu Weiping said the project would "significantly improve efficiency" and support development of the Yangtze River Economic Belt. While the construction period extends to 2035, the eventual doubling of capacity to 336m tonnes/year will reduce transit delays for dry bulk and container vessels carrying raw materials and finished goods.
Currently, the existing locks and ship lift act as a bottleneck, causing queue times and higher freight costs for commodities moving through the Three Gorges. The new five-stage system will allow 10,000-dwt vessels to transit more quickly, potentially lowering per-ton freight costs for coal shipments from northern mines to southern power plants, or for iron ore moving upstream to steel mills in the interior. For agricultural commodities, smoother logistics on the Yangtze could improve supply chain reliability for soybean and grain imports arriving at eastern ports and destined for inland processing.
Given that the project is part of the 15th Five-Year Plan, it reflects China's long-term strategy to maintain the Yangtze as a backbone of domestic commodity distribution, even as rail and road networks expand. The first image above shows the dam complex, illustrating the scale of infrastructure involved.
While the expansion will not be completed until 2035, the start of construction sends a clear signal that China is investing heavily in inland waterway capacity to support sustained economic growth and commodity demand. Traders and procurement teams should monitor periodic progress updates, as any acceleration or delay in the nine-year timeline will affect future shipping congestion and freight rate expectations on the Yangtze corridor.