China will launch a nationwide railway speed acceleration this
year, the sixth in nine years, to boost transport capacity, a
senior railway expert said on Tuesday.
After the speed raise this year, nearly 10,000 kilometers of
railways will have experienced the operation, according to He
Huawu, chief engineer with the Ministry of Railways. Upon
completion, China's express railway network, which allows speeds of
over 160 km per hour, will also include around 6,000 km of upgraded
high-speed routes with a running capacity of 200 km per hour,
according to He, who was attending a ceremony marking the 110th
anniversary of Jiaotong (Communication) University in southwest
China.
However, He did not disclose the time-scale for the speed
acceleration.
China raised its railway speed for the first time in 1997. The
fifth speed increase, launched on April 18, 2004, has helped to
increase the country's passenger and freight transport capacity by
18.5 percent and 15 percent, respectively, over the past two years,
the ministry said.
According to the ministry, China's railways completed 1.154
billion passenger journeys last year, 18.7 percent more than before
the speed was raised, and transported a total of 2.686 billion tons
of cargo.
China has 22,090 km of railways which can allow trains to run at
a speed above 120 km per hour, 14,025 km of railways above 160 km
per hour and 5,371 km above 200 km per hour.
He noted that China's railway transportation capacity still lags
far behind the economic and social development demand and the
government has made up its mind to increase investment in the
development of express railways, high-speed rail lines, rail
traffic service between and within cities between 2006-2010.
According to the plan, China will carry out some 200 projects
concerning railway construction, including investing at least 1,250
billion yuan (some 156 billion US dollars) to build 7,000 km of
passenger rail lines, during the period, known as the 11th Five-year Plan for national economic and
social development.
(Xinhua News Agency May 17, 2006)