A total of 18 new bridges and tunnels spanning the lower Yangtze
River will be built in east China's Jiangsu Province by 2020, according to a newly
released urban planning document filed by local construction
authorities.
According to local construction authorities, the primary goal of
building the new passages is to bridge the cross-river cities to
better co-ordinate development.
The six cities and 15 counties along lower Yangtze in Jiangsu
make up one third of the province's population, one fourth of its
total land area and half of its GDP, according to statistics from
the riverside urban planning document.
"However, disparity exists between those cities separated by the
river, and the northern Jiangsu has lagged behind its southern
counterpart," said Wang Xuefeng, vice-director of the Urban
Planning Department under the Jiangsu Bureau of Construction.
"Solving the cross-river transportation bottleneck will help the
cities share resources and make them complementary to each other in
their economic and social development," Wang said.
According to Wang, the new cross-river passages will link the
opposite-bank cities so that they are within half an hour's drive
of each other.
"Motivated by the passage plan, some southern cities like
Jiangyin and Changzhou have already started building several
industrial parks in their cross-river cities," Wang said.
The passages will also link the Jiangsu cities to other cities
within Yangtze River Delta, including Shanghai, Wang added. The
400-kilometer leg of the lower Yangtze starts in Nanjing, capital
of Jiangsu, and ends at an estuary in Shanghai.
The present six bridges over the lower Yangtze (completed or
under construction) include three in the Nanjing section, one
bridging Yangzhou and Zhenjiang, one bridging Suzhou and Nantong
and one in the Jiangyin section.
According to an evaluation, by Wang's department, by 2010, the
cross-river transportation demand within Jiangsu will rise to
400,000 vehicles per day in 2010 and 750,000 vehicles per day in
2020.
"The present six bridges are far from adequate, and we
definitely need more new passages to meet the demand," Wang
said.
However, some experts are calling for an end to the bridge
building craze, arguing that the mushroom bridge building across
the Yangtze, China's longest river, has significantly impacted
waterway transportation on the river.
Wang said related bureaus would monitor the bridge building to
guarantee cargo ships have enough headroom to pass.
(China Daily June 22, 2006)