GREAT ENTERPRISE
LAYING IRAK PIPE-LINE
COST TEN MILLIONS
. LONDON, April 12. The £10,000,000 pipe line -which the Irak Petroleum Company is laying to the Mediterranean is the most remarkable enterprise in the Middle East today, says the Palestine correspondent of the "Manchester Guardian." The line runs from Kirkup to Haditha, where it divides, one section going to Haifa, 620 miles away, ajid the other to Tripoli, 540 miles away, Each passes through 300 miles of desert. While the Tripoli line .passes under a great lava bed which resembles a shelled area, thousands of workers in, the desert must receive water and supplies from more hospitable lands, necessitating the construction of hundreds of miles of metalled roads to carry lorries and huge construction machines. Three thousand men. at present are turning the Arab village of Maf rak into a replica of Kantara in wartime. The pipe-laying involves four main operations. The stringing of the 12in pipes along the desert is proceeding at the rate of nearly a mile a day. Each piece of pipe, 40ft long, weighs almost a ton. Then the ditching is performed by a remarkable machine, which makes furrows across the desert at a rate of a mile a day until it strikes lava rock, which must be blasted. Arabs follow, widening and deepening the ditch. ' ~' Next come welders using giant apparatus, brought, to white heat by a travelling generator, after which the pipes, painted and tarred, and wrapped in asphalt and canvas, are finally buried by another machine. Twelve pumping machines will be installed at various points, to fores oil through the pipes. The pipe-line will enable Suez Canal dues amounting to £1,000,000 a year to bo avoided.
Permanent link to this item
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19330421.2.73
Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 93, 21 April 1933, Page 7
Word Count
281GREAT ENTERPRISE Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 93, 21 April 1933, Page 7
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Evening Post. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.