Authorities in east China's Zhejiang Province have outlined plans for
investing at least 150 billion yuan (US$18.5 billion) in railway
development in the next five years.
The money, a joint investment by Zhejiang government and the
Ministry of Railways, will be spent on upgrading existing tracks
and building new ones during the current Five-Year Guidelines
(2006-10) period, officials from the Zhejiang Provincial
Development and Reform Commission said recently.
"The new railway plan will greatly accelerate the integration of
cities in the Yangtze River Delta Region and speed up its economic
development," said Wang Shuhua, a senior official from the Zhejiang
Railway Office under the commission.
The blueprint outlines 16 projects to transform the Yangtze
Delta railway system into a world-class network. These include:
Construction of high-speed inter-city lines connecting major
cities in the delta
Electronic renovation of the Shanghai-Hangzhou line and the
Hangzhou-Zhuzhou line, a key east-west route between Zhejiang and
Hunan provinces, to be completed this year
New double-track line connecting Zhejiang and Anhui provinces
Construction of a new line between Wenzhou and Fuzhou, Fujian Province.
Construction of a line connecting Ningbo and Wenzhou, scheduled
to be completed in 2010
The construction of the high-speed railway linking Hangzhou and
Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu Province, is expected to start at the
end of this year, and the service should begin operation before
2010, said Wang.
Upon completion, the travel time between Hangzhou and Nanjing
will be shorten to about one hour, Wang said.
According a blueprint, which has been approved by the State
Council, five high-speed railways will link 10 big cities in east
China in the coming years.
By then, the dream of the "one-or-two-hour economic circle,"
referring to a rapid transit system that can bring people from one
city in the delta region to another in just one or two hours, will
be realized.
Experts hailed the plan as a milestone in the development of the
Yangtze River Delta Region.
"Upon completion, the high-speed railways connecting the Yangtze
River Delta Region to the outside, places such as the Pearl River
Delta, will bring more opportunities for co-operation in economic
and social areas," said Qiu Zhicheng, an expert from the Yangtze
River Delta International Research Centre of Zhejiang
University.
Commuters will be able to travel easily between these areas,
which means more people can do business, said Qiu.
"The successful mode of economic and industrial development in
the two deltas will effectively be introduced and applied to other
regions with the help of the railway."
Qiu noted that China's railway transportation capacity still
lags far behind the demand caused by rapid economic and social
development.
As a result, the overburdened railway system has curbed the
development of China's two economic engines, the Yangtze and Pearl
River Delta Regions.
"High-speed railways will eventually become dominant in the
Yangtze Delta, where the economy will be accelerated by an
efficient transport network," said Qiu.
(China Daily May 23, 2006)