Since 1949, China has carried out extensive land reclamation projects. It is among the countries which have built the most artificial land; from 1949 to 1990s, the total area of land reclaimed from the sea of China was about 13,000 km2.[1]
A grand total of 150 km2 was planned to be reclaimed from the sea in 2009.[2]
From June 2004 to the present, land reclamation is going on at Shantou. Project surface to reclaim is 146 km2.[3]
In 2020, Tencent announced its smart city-style urban development dubbed Net City, which will be built on reclaimed land in Shenzhen.[4]
Between 2009 and 2020, Jiangsu will reclaim 21 parcels of tidal areas along the southern Yellow Sea, yielding a total of 1,817 square km of new land.[5]
Starting in March 2005, the Caofeidian Land Reclamation Project (曹妃甸围海造地工程) reclaimed a total of 310 km2 [6] next to the island of Tangshan. The first stage of 12 km2 was finished on 28 March 2006.[7] The plan is to make space for the new industrial base of Shougang.
Between 2003 and 2006, the Shanghai government spent 40 billion yuan on the Nanhui New City, formerly called Lingang New City Project (临港新城计划) of Shanghai, to reclaim 133.3 km2 of artificial land from the sea.[8]
Starting in 1975, the largest single land reclamation project in Zhejiang Province has been the Xuanmen Land Reclamation Project (漩门围垦工程) in Yuhuan County. It has three phases, of which phase II covered 53.3 km2 (February 1999 - April 2001), and phase III 45.3 km2 (March 2006 - 2010).[9]
See main article: Land reclamation in Hong Kong. The government of Hong Kong started reclaiming land from the surrounding sea as early as the 1840s. Formal reclamation starts at 1860s and its land reclamation is still proceeding. A notable achievement is Hong Kong International Airport, built in the 1990s on reclaimed land, absorbing the former islands Chek Lap Kok and Lam Chau.
Macau has been the site of land reclamation projects for several hundred years. As of 2023, more than half of Macau is composed to reclaimed land.
Macau's Cotai Strip was built upon a 5.2 square kilometer land reclamation site in the Seac Pai Bay of the Pearl River Estuary.[11] The strip joins the formerly separate islands of Taipa and Coloane. The Cotai Strip is a gambling and shopping area which includes a dozen multibillion-dollar resorts, a private university campus, and the Macau garrison of the People's Liberation Army.
In the 21st century, the PRC has upheld the 1947 claims of the Republic of China (modified by Zhou Enlai into a nine-dash line) over most of the South China Sea through a series of disputed mid-ocean land reclamation projects in the Spratly Islands known as the "Great Wall of Sand". The islands being expanded or created by the project are notionally administered as parts of Sansha in Hainan Province. As of December 2016, the projects in the Spratlies covered 3200acres of land protected by "'significant' weapons systems, including anti-aircraft and anti-missile systems".[12]