Northeastern China is speeding up construction of a number new
railway lines including a high-speed link that will whip passengers
to their destination at 300 kilometers an hour.
Construction of a passenger-only railway, linking Harbin,
capital of
Heilongjiang Province, and Dalian, a coastal city of
Liaoning Province, is expected to begin this year, sources
close to the railway project have disclosed.
Trains on the route are expected to make the 902-kilometer
journey in just four hours and will reach speeds of 300 kilometers
per hour.
Costing 82 billion yuan (about US$10 billion), the railway will
run through the central part of the northeast region from Harbin in
the north to Dalian in the south via major cities such as Changchun
and Shenyang. The railway will be completed in five years.
The existing Harbin-Dalian railway is the busiest railway in the
northeast region, with train departs averaging every five to six
minutes, said an official with the planning section of the Railway
Administration of Shenyang, capital of Liaoning Province.
Building a passenger-only railway between Harbin and Dalian is
aimed at easing the pressure on the existing Harbin-Dalian railway
and improving transport capacity of the railway, the official
said.
An expert with the Liaoning Provincial Government development
research center said that as major industries are concentrated in
areas along the Harbin-Dalian railway, the operation of the
passenger-only railway would not only increase cargo transport on
the existing railway, but also bring new economic development
opportunities to areas along the railway.
Three other railway projects are also in the works and they will
link the existing 13 railways with the eastern part of the
northeast region. Upon completion, the 16 sections will form a
major railway artery. It will be 1,389 kilometers long and linked
Mudanjiang, a city in Heilongjiang, in the north with Dalian via
Tumen and Tonghua cities in
Jilin Province, and Dandong and Zhuanghe cities in
Liaoning.
Costing 12.7 billion yuan (about US$1.58 billion), the east
railway projects are scheduled to be completed and go into
operation in 2008.
Meanwhile, construction of a train-ferry project, linking Dalian
with Yantai, a coastal city of east China's
Shandong Province, across the Bohai straits is also going on
smoothly.
Currently, supporting railway and port infrastructure for the
train-ferry route have been completed and the whole project is
expected to be completed and go into trial operation in the second
half of the year. Formal operation will start next year.
With a budget of 2.3 billion yuan (about US$284 million), the
train-ferry service is designed to accommodate trains, motor
vehicles and passengers.
Currently passengers and cargo traveling from China's northeast
region, to the Shandong Peninsula and the Yangtze River delta have
to go through Tianjin, adding up to 1,000 kilometers to the
journey.
The train-ferry service will improve travel efficiency,
alleviate rail congestion and rejuvenate the industrial rust belt
in northeast China, said professor Xiao Xingzhi with the Economic
and Social Development Research Institute of the Dongbei (northeast
China) Finance and Economics University.
(Xinhua News Agency March 15, 2006)