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China’s bullet trains facilitate market integration and mitigate the cost of megacity growth

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Cerdit: chensiqiongjz
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CRH(China Railway High-speed)Network - The Yangtze River Delta Region:

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To be greatly expanded with up to 30 inter-city express rails。
 
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15 July 2014Last updated at 00:04

All aboard: China's railway dream


BBC News - All aboard: China's railway dream

Carrie Gracie reports on China's high-speed rail revolution

At Asia's biggest rail cargo base in Chengdu in south-west China, the cranes are hard at work, swinging containers from trucks onto a freight train. The containers are filled with computers, clothes, even cars.

Until last year, all of it would have first gone more than 1,000 miles east to Shanghai and then to Europe by sea.

But now the journey's been cut from six weeks to two. The trains are bound straight for Europe via Kazakhstan, Russia and Belarus. They will be unloaded in Poland and distributed to their final destinations.

Chinese media called their prime minister the country's top railway salesman, and when he went to London last month and trumpeted the prowess of China's railway builders, enthusiasts back home were quick to observe that China was turning the tables on one of the world's first great railway nations.

They pointed out that the nation which had brought the first rail to China 150 years ago is now agonising over its first 120-mile stretch of high-speed track between London and Birmingham, while China has already spent £300bn ($514bn) building 8,000-miles of track and intends to double that before the end of the decade.

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This cargo hub in China's Chengdu province sees busy operations on a daily basis

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China has already spent billions to improve its railway networks and intends to increase its efforts

Foreign dependence

Until now, Chinese railway engineering has always relied on foreigners.

One hundred and fifty years ago, the British built China's first railway. The Qing Empire was suspicious of the foreign colonialists and their plans to open up China's interior by means of rail. But Europeans, Soviets and Japanese have all played a part. Even as recently as a decade ago, it was French, German and Japanese companies which brought high-speed rail to China.

But now, China has begun building its own bullet trains and indignantly denies suggestions that its advances owe anything to stolen technology. It said the story is one of "introduction, digestion, absorption and re-innovation".

Whatever the case, China's great railway adventure is picking up steam. The maps on the walls of the headquarters of the Chengdu Logistics Office make it obvious how rail can transform the fortunes of west China.

Until now, shipping goods down the Yangtse and then loading them onto ocean-going ships has enormously disadvantaged inland-China. Now, said logistics chief Chen Zhongwei, the days of foreigners knowing only coastal cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong are over.

"We have an opportunity to narrow the gap between east and west China. We're no longer a landlocked city, we're a port city," Mr Chen said.

"No longer famous for bad roads, now we've got an international airport and a rail port. We're China's ideal jumping off point for Europe."

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High-speed trains now criss-cross China, dramatically cutting journey times

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Better transport infrastructure has helped boost jobs and incomes in China

Railway revolution

Chengdu claims that half the world's top companies are now moving production bases west and that the software is following the hardware.

In Chengdu's business park, I watched programmers and graphic designers fine-tune Spartan Wars: Gods of Olympus. It's a new game targeting Europe and North America from a Chengdu-based company called tap4fun.

The glass walls of their offices open and close with fingerprint scanners. Their break out zone is complete with table tennis, running machines and pictures of Apple founder Steve Jobs.

Jacob Maynard from Arizona told me rail has made a huge difference.

"Transportation has actually been quite revolutionary," he said. "It has opened up lots of opportunities when before, it was an absolute nightmare. Now it is much more convenient both going west and east."

The rail revolution is not without setbacks. The high-speed network opened in 2007 and was a source of enormous national pride until a crash in 2011 which killed 40 people and prompted a bout of soul-searching.

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About 40 people were killed when two high-speed trains collided in China's Zhejiang province in 2011

(How many times do these foreign reporters need be told that the two trains involved in rear-end collision were NOT high-speed trains?They were EMUs traveling at the time on old conventional tracks and both human errors and signal malfunctionings due to appalling weather were to blame)

Questions about the safety of the network along with corruption revelations cost the railway minister his job and eventually the whole ministry was dismantled to be replaced by the state owned China Railway Corporation.

Deep pockets

Three years later, the mood has returned to one of pride mixed with surprise, to see China winning high-speed rail contracts around the world.

The industry website Railyway.com calls rail China's "business card abroad" and the Communist Party's Guangming Daily newspaper claims China's high speed network is "the world's fastest and best".

On his tireless foreign travels, China's Prime Minister Li Keqiang "the railway salesman" has already successfully pressed for contracts in Europe, Africa and South East Asia. Once famous as the world's factory for low-technology and labour intensive products, China is now adding bullet trains to the mix, a symbol of its ability to shift up the technology ladder.

Ambition doesn't stop there. Not content with a high-speed grid at home and lucrative railway contracts abroad, Beijing is considering both funding and building high-speed lines from west China through Central Asia to Europe and from south-west China through South East Asia to Singapore.

The challenges are immense: persuading Central Asian states to move to standard gauge tracks and tackling security to add to the enormous diplomatic, financial and technical hurdles.

But China has advantages in this game: enormous economies of scale, the absence of a political cycle to disrupt long-term planning, state-owned rail builders with deep pockets, and not least control of the media.

Back at the Chengdu cargo hub, loading is finished and the train departs on its two week journey to Europe. If China realises its dream for a high-speed route in the same direction, passengers may one day make the trip in two days.

It seems almost unimaginable but many observers would have laughed if you'd said 10 years ago that China's rail builders could come from so far behind to undercut the market leaders on their own doorstep. Watch this space.
 
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The rail revolution is not without setbacks. The high-speed network opened in 2007 and was a source of enormous national pride until a crash in 2011 which killed 40 people and prompted a bout of soul-searching.

Ah this Westerners, in their eyes, one accident almost brought the entire industry to a halt.

Maybe, they would like to see China to return to ox and cart so that no further "high-speed accidents" would not happen.

They either care too much about the wellbeing of Chinese, or they are playing dumb and are f...ing pig-faced hypocrites.
 
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Ah this Westerners, in their eyes, one accident almost brought the entire industry to a halt.

Maybe, they would like to see China to return to ox and cart so that no further "high-speed accidents" would not happen.

They either care too much about the wellbeing of Chinese, or they are playing dumb and are f...ing pig-faced hypocrites.

Yup and that is why any Chinese know the truth behind western lies, they should expose it to the world . I think there was a Chinese website that did just that.

But if China went back to ox and cart, the west will praise them as,"defenders of ecology", :"Champions of the earth." Or some BS like that. :lol:

How many times do these foreign reporters need be told that the two trains involved in rear-end collision were NOT high-speed trains?They were EMUs traveling at the time on old conventional tracks and both human errors and signal malfunctionings due to appalling weather were to blame)

Did the government tried to cover the incident up afterwards? My HK friend said they did, I want to set him straight.
 
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CRH(China Railway High-speed)Network - The Yangtze River Delta Region:

HC95IaF.jpg


To be greatly expanded with up to 30 inter-city express rails。

I like this railway network, many provinces are planning inter city express railways.

In the future, there is going to form a large scale of metropolis consisting of tons of super rich, clean small and medium cities. I feel this regional economy integration leading by massive railway and hwy infrastructure will be the driving force of China's urbanization.
 
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All aboard the 'condom express'? Chinese railways start selling train-naming rights to sponsors

China has started selling naming rights for its bullet trains to commercial sponsors, state media reported yesterday, as it increasingly commercialises its state-controlled railway sector.

Passengers on a train in southern China recently found it had been named for China Unicom, one of the country’s three telecom service providers, the Shanghai-based Oriental Morning Post said.

The Bank of China, one of the country’s “Big Four” banks, and a food company, Luziyao – whose products include nuts and pickled fish – had also named trains after themselves, the newspaper said.

A city outside Beijing extolled its natural beauty by naming a train “Grand Rivers and Mountains Zhangjiakou”, it said.

China has the world’s largest high-speed rail network, but the sector has been rocked by scandals and corruption allegations, including a 2011 crash which killed at least 40 people and sparked an investigation which found evidence of bribery.

The government in March last year merged the railway ministry into another state agency and turned over its commercial functions to a new company, the China Railway Corporation (CRC).

A one-year sponsorship of a bullet train could cost 12 million yuan (HK$15 million), the Oriental Morning Post said, citing unnamed sources.

The move was driven by the fact that train operators were now accountable for their own profits and losses, sources told the Shanghai paper.

Social media users have leaped on the marketing possibilities.

One posting on Weibo suggested a condom maker as a potential client: “Attention passengers: The Durex High-Speed Train is now reaching the station. Durex wishes you a pleasant journey.” :rofl::rofl::rofl:

The debt-strapped CRC was spun off from the former ministry of railways in March last year, taking over the entire assets and debts of the dissolved railway department, the South China Morning Post previously reported. A reform in the railway freight sector has since been at the top of its agenda.

Statistics from the National Audit Office show that the new national railway operator was bogged down in debt of 2.9 trillion yuan in June last year, while its total assets were valued at 4.66 trillion yuan, the Post reported earlier this year.
 
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nice farm field. better view than metropolis area.
but this is traditional rail, right?
 
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July 22

Lijiang-Shangri-LA Railway(part of Kunming-Lhasa Railway)starts construction

Yunnan Province
Lijiang-Shangri-LA Railway: 139.66km
Cost: 10.372 billion yuan
Construction: 6 years
Design speed: 120kmph

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An epic project to be carried out in the most atrocious terrains the Earth can offer!:china::enjoy:
 
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