Construction of the 92.3-billion-yuan (US$12 billion)
passenger-only railway line linking four major cities in Northeast
China began yesterday in Changchun, capital of Jilin Province.
The railway stretches from Harbin, capital of Heilongjiang
Province, to Dalian in Liaoning Province via Changchun and
Shenyang, capital of Liaoning Province and will have 23 stations.
It will cut through major industrial clusters such as heavy
chemicals in Harbin and Daqing, automobile in Changchun, equipment
manufacturing in Shenyang, chemicals, ship-building and information
technology in Dalian and steel in Anshan.
Experts said the new railway will ease pressure on the existing
Harbin-Dalian railway, which is the busiest in the region,
transporting coal, oil, agrarian produce and wood.
This line will be used mainly for cargo transport when the new
railway is completed and opened to traffic at the beginning of
2013.
The Ministry of Railway said that to start with, trains will run
only at 200 kph on the new rail line, though the line will be
upgraded later to run trains at 350 kph.
As a key project of China's mid-and-long-term rail construction
plan, the railway is expected to transport 37 million passengers
per year by 2020, and 51 million by 2030.
It will also support the development of two major harbors in the
region - Dalian and Yingkou.
Besides this project, three more sections of railways are under
construction in Northeast China. They will link up with 13 existing
railways and form a major railway artery along the coast in the
eastern part of Northeast China.
The 1,389-km rail artery will stretch from Mudanjiang, a city in
Heilongjiang, in the north, to Dalian via Tumen and Tonghua in
Jilin Province, and Dandong and Zhuanghe cities in Liaoning.
Theses lines will contribute to the country's plan to revitalize
the northeastern region.
The central government plans to develop the northeast into a
base for equipment manufacturing, raw material and energy security,
agriculture and forestry and for tech innovation.
(China Daily August 24, 2007)