The Beijing government will haul vehicles off roads for two
weeks in August to rehearse traffic control measures for next
year's Beijing Olympics, organizers of the event said.
City authorities will clear Beijing's roads of about one million
vehicles between Aug. 7 and 20, said sources with the Beijing
organizing committee of the Olympic Games.
They said the city government had endorsed the plan at an
internal meeting, but refused to give details.
A spokesman with Beijing's road traffic management bureau said
the move would certainly speed up traffic in the urban areas and
would cause little inconvenience.
"Students will be staying home for the summer holiday and the
working population can take public transport instead of driving,"
he said without giving his name.
The bureau said urban road transport has reached a crisis point
in Beijing, with 90 percent of roads operating at full capacity and
little room for expansion.
The number of Beijing's registered automobiles reached 3 million
on May 26, putting great pressure on the city's traffic system and
environment.
Despite the fact that Beijing is a flat city made for bicycles,
and the environmental cost of cars, the city's auto fleet is
growing at the rate of 1,000 vehicles a day, and the total number
is expected to top 3.3 million by August next year, when the
Olympic Games open.
The municipal government has subsidized public transport heavily
this year and slashed the average bus fare from 1 yuan to 0.4 yuan
hoping more private drivers would take buses instead.
But it has so far refrained from imposing a significant tax on
vehicles.
Last November Beijing imposed a six-day ban on at least 490,000
government vehicles and advised private drivers to take buses to
make way for a summit meeting between Chinese and African leaders.
Traffic was surprisingly easy even in the busiest areas during the
week and citizens were treated to blue skies.
"I responded to the government's call and left my car at home
that week," said Zhang Huijuan, a software engineer.
She had to take the subway and switch to a bus. But the trip
from her home in downtown Xuanwumen to Zhongguancun, the high-tech
zone in northwest Beijing, normally an hour's drive, only took 40
minutes.
"If government vehicles are banned again, I will definitely
follow suit," she said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 5, 2007)