China plans to add 200,000 kilometres of highway to its existing road network of 1.4 million kilometres by the end of 2005, according to Vice-Minister of Communications Hu Xijie.
Once the projects are completed, China's road length per 100 square kilometres will reach 16.7 kilometres, Hu said.
"More than half of our investment will be put into the country's western regions to help the area better develop its opportunities,'' Hu said.
During the 10th Five-Year Plan period (2001-05), 80,000 kilometres of highway will be constructed in China's western regions, extending the region's total road length to 650,000 kilometres.
He indicated that the Ministry of Communications plans to invest 700 to 800 billion yuan (US$84.6 - 96.7 billion) in the next 10 years to build road networks in the region.
Hu said his ministry is confident the plan will produce high-quality construction projects.
"We will strictly abide by the Bidding Law when allocating our construction projects. Nobody can take advantage of their positions to secure illicit gains for companies and individuals,'' Hu said in the news briefing.
"Road experts, instead of local officials, will dictate the authorization process of bidding, and officials can only serve as supervisors to those projects,'' Hu said.
Special inspections teams, deployed by the ministry, will also oversee some of the larger projects to guarantee fair play.
Hu admitted that corruption was uncovered involving past road construction projects, but said those cases were "extremely minor.''
Zhang Chunxian, another vice-minister of the ministry who attended the conference, said the ministry will open its water transportation market as of May 1.
"The opening process will be carried out step by step, though the country's pending WTO entry may push the steps to happen faster,'' Zhang said.
He indicated that China will open transports along all major rivers, including the Yangtze and Yellow rivers, in the near future if China is granted a smooth entry into the WTO.
Zhang said his ministry has decided to build Shanghai into a major deep-water port throughout the next five years, with the hope that it develops into an international shipping centre.
In addition to Shanghai, Dalian, Tianjin, Qingdao and Shenzhen will also undergo renovations or upgrades to become modern deep-water ports by 2005.
Zhang said China welcomes overseas companies to join the bidding process of harbour construction.
"All the harbours will be open to overseas investors under China's related investment regulations,'' Zhang said.
(China Daily 03/30/2001)