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Argentina revamps rail transport with China's help
Source: Xinhua| 2017-04-13 12:15:44|Editor: Tian Shaohui

LLAVALLOL, Argentina, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Argentina has embarked on an ambitious plan to upgrade its dilapidated rail transport, taking China as a key partner providing both technology and manpower.

Xinhua toured workshops serving the network's central Roca Line, in Llavallol, a town located 33 km south of the capital Buenos Aires, where technicians from China's CRRC Sifang Locomotive and Rolling Stock Co., Ltd. are working side by side with their Argentinian counterparts on the binational undertaking.

The technicians arrive daily by special transport to carry out maintenance work on trains that the Argentine government has purchased to completely revamp the network's Roca, Sarmiento and Mitre lines.

The China-made trains are quieter than their precursors, some of which date from the 1970s, and are more energy efficient, even though passenger cars are air conditioned.

The modern cars also have special features for commuters with disabilities, and are installed with security cameras and a safety system that prevents the train from moving while doors are open.

Yang Haijun, who has worked in Argentina for the past three years as a CRRC administrator and head technician, said he took an instant liking to the locals.

"With just a 'hello,' I sensed their friendship and enthusiasm," Yang told Xinhua.

They are also quick to learn, he said.

"Argentinians are very studious. At the beginning, we offered the country technological and operational services as the Argentinians did not know how to handle the trains well. But after receiving our training, which lasted for two years, they have mastered the technology," said Yang.

Fabian Malvillini, general coordinator of Engineering Management at the state-run rail operator SOFSE, the agency responsible for running and maintaining the lines, has 30 years of experience in rail transit.

The upgrade has been notable, he said, especially in terms of bolstering safety features.

"For us, it means a very significant technological change, mainly in terms of security. It is a very good product and we are very pleased to be able to work with the engineering staff (from China), who are very good people and very professional," said Malvillini.

The modernization of the rail is also making maintenance work easier, he said.

"The technological changes have really simplified maintenance, because the systems, such as traction and alternate currents, require maintenance that is much faster and simpler," said Malvillini.

On the other hand, the trains' high-tech aspects are proving more challenging.

"In contrast, we do have to train a lot in computing. Many of the systems are computerized, so we have to train people, and they (the Chinese technicians) help us with that," Malvillini said.

"Personally, I have learned a lot from the traction system, which is different, new and novel in the metropolitan network, and the knowledge they transmit to us on a day to day basis," he added.

The Roca Line is the most heavily used within the metropolitan rail network, which serves the capital and surrounding communities.

Figures from the national transport commission (CNRT) show 329.5 million commuters used the system's seven lines in 2015, with Roca transporting 128.7 million.

The decision to modernize the system followed a tragic accident in February 2012 that left 51 passengers dead and another 789 injured, after a train on the Sarmiento Line failed to break as it entered the Once Station.

After the third worst rail accident in the country's history, then President Cristina Fernandez (2007-2015) decided to partner with China to improve the capital's transit system, a partnership that continues under her successor Mauricio Macri.

The two countries are also working together to modernize Argentina's cargo rail network.
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Rail car maker rebounds in 2017
By Zhong Nan and Zheng Yiran in Beijing and Tian Xuefei in Harbin | China Daily | Updated: 2017-04-18 08:24

CRRC Qiqihar Rolling Stock Co, China's biggest freight train manufacturer by production volume, received 7,900 freight car orders from home and abroad in the first quarter, gaining new growth momentum after two years of declining market conditions, its officials said on Monday.

"The deals indicate that the global commodity flows are back on track as many countries are raising the demand in either buying new rail vehicles or replacing the old models," said Chang Wenyu, deputy general manager of CRRC Qiqihar, a subsidiary of China Railway Rolling Stock Corp.

China Railway Corp, the country's railway operator, remained the manufacturer's biggest customer, ordering 7,500 cargo cars, with the remaining 400 sold to South Korea for cement tanker cars.

"Many of our overseas opportunities, such as the South Korean one, come from the development of the Belt and Road Initiative and from Africa's increasing demand for infrastructure projects, especially in fast-growing markets such as Kenya, Nigeria and Ethiopia," said Chang Wenyu, deputy general manager of CRRC Qiqihar.

In addition to rail cars sold to South Korea, CRRC Qiqihar has shipped the first 60 cargo cars to the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Kenya, with a second group of 500 on their way.

Partnering with China Road and Bridge Corp, the company took up the 10-year maintenance and repair service contract for the Mombasa-Nairobi railway. This project is CRRC Qiqihar's first service business in an overseas market.

Cui Shihai, deputy chief engineer of CRRC Qiqihar, said that the company is eyeing both domestic and international markets to promote the upgrading of its products.

The company just launched a new type of product, the piggyback wagon, to further compete with road transportation. Such freight cars can carry trucks to further cut transportation time and fuel cost, especially for long-distance journeys.

The company encountered its first financial loss in 2015, affected by the declining demand for global commodities including coal, oil, steel and construction materials between 2014 and 2016.

But 2017 appears to be a turnaround for the company. During the first quarter, sales revenue of CRRC Qiqihar reached 940 million yuan ($137 million), up 84.31 percent from a year earlier. The company maintained and repaired a total of 2,550 freight cars between January and March.

The company has exported more than 40,000 freight cars to more than 30 countries and regions, including the United States, Brazil, Australia and Kazakhstan.

It started production on 150 cargo cars for New Zealand's state-run KiwiRail this month.
 
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Chinese bus maker sees soaring exports
(Xinhua) 09:59, April 23, 2017

ZHENGZHOU, April 22 (Xinhua) -- Chinese leading bus maker Zhengzhou Yutong Bus has seen its export volume for the first quarter rising by 56 percent annually, thanks to opportunities brought about by the Belt and Road initiative.

According to the company, it has recently received an order for 500 large buses from Myanmar. The company has delivered over 1,000 passenger buses to Myanmar since it entered the country in 2010.

Company officials said the Belt and Road initiative and the "Made in China 2025" plan are offering more chances for the company to expand global presence.

Yutong's products have been sold to more than 40 countries along the Belt and Road. Yutong has carried out production and technology cooperation with countries including Myanmar, Pakistan, Iran and Cuba, and auto parts from Yutong can be assembled in those countries.

In 2016, the company exported 110 buses to Bulgaria, the first time China's passenger buses entered the EU market in batches.

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Rail car maker rebounds in 2017
By Zhong Nan and Zheng Yiran in Beijing and Tian Xuefei in Harbin | China Daily | Updated: 2017-04-18 08:24

CRRC Qiqihar Rolling Stock Co, China's biggest freight train manufacturer by production volume, received 7,900 freight car orders from home and abroad in the first quarter, gaining new growth momentum after two years of declining market conditions, its officials said on Monday.

"The deals indicate that the global commodity flows are back on track as many countries are raising the demand in either buying new rail vehicles or replacing the old models," said Chang Wenyu, deputy general manager of CRRC Qiqihar, a subsidiary of China Railway Rolling Stock Corp.

China Railway Corp, the country's railway operator, remained the manufacturer's biggest customer, ordering 7,500 cargo cars, with the remaining 400 sold to South Korea for cement tanker cars.

"Many of our overseas opportunities, such as the South Korean one, come from the development of the Belt and Road Initiative and from Africa's increasing demand for infrastructure projects, especially in fast-growing markets such as Kenya, Nigeria and Ethiopia," said Chang Wenyu, deputy general manager of CRRC Qiqihar.

In addition to rail cars sold to South Korea, CRRC Qiqihar has shipped the first 60 cargo cars to the Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Kenya, with a second group of 500 on their way.

Partnering with China Road and Bridge Corp, the company took up the 10-year maintenance and repair service contract for the Mombasa-Nairobi railway. This project is CRRC Qiqihar's first service business in an overseas market.

Cui Shihai, deputy chief engineer of CRRC Qiqihar, said that the company is eyeing both domestic and international markets to promote the upgrading of its products.

The company just launched a new type of product, the piggyback wagon, to further compete with road transportation. Such freight cars can carry trucks to further cut transportation time and fuel cost, especially for long-distance journeys.

The company encountered its first financial loss in 2015, affected by the declining demand for global commodities including coal, oil, steel and construction materials between 2014 and 2016.

But 2017 appears to be a turnaround for the company. During the first quarter, sales revenue of CRRC Qiqihar reached 940 million yuan ($137 million), up 84.31 percent from a year earlier. The company maintained and repaired a total of 2,550 freight cars between January and March.

The company has exported more than 40,000 freight cars to more than 30 countries and regions, including the United States, Brazil, Australia and Kazakhstan.

It started production on 150 cargo cars for New Zealand's state-run KiwiRail this month.
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US workers receive subway technology training in China
By Li Yan (People's Daily Online) 13:47, April 26, 2017

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A total of 33 employees from the Springfield, Massachusetts base of Chinese rail-car builder China Railway Rolling Stock Corporation (CRRC) Massachusetts have come to China for a three-month training program on subway technology.

It is the latest interaction between China and the U.S. on rail transportation, though the history of such interactions date back many years. In September 1872, 30 Chinese children were selected by the government of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) to study in the U.S., including a pioneering Chinese rail engineer named Zhan Tianyou.

The American employees are scheduled to receive training from CRRC Changchun Railway Vehicles Co. Ltd., based in Changchun, Jilin province. After going through technical training, the employees will be assigned to workshops to put their new knowledge into action.

The employees will eventually be in charge of CRRC subway contracts in Boston and Los Angeles. They are expected to pass on their knowledge to colleagues after returning to the U.S.
 
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Ukraine offers China Railways to invest in subway, bridge and high-speed rail link

Wednesday, 26 April, 2017 - 14:12 (EEST)

The Ukrainian government on Tuesday offered China Railway International Group (CRIG) a number of infrastructure investment opportunities, including the fourth line of the Kyiv Metro and the construction of a bridge, the Ministry of Economic Development and Trade wrote on Twitter, Global Construction Review reports.

The ministry published two tweets to say that it had held talks with CRIG, and that the Chinese giant was ”ready to invest in Ukrainian infrastructure.”

It continued: ”We can offer six projects for investment, in particular a new bridge in Kyiv and the fourth line of the subway,” GCR reports.

The present metro system, which opened in 1960, has 52 stations divided between three routes. The fourth Podilsko-Vyhurivska line would run southwest to northeast, crossing the Dnipro at the future business center of Rybalskiy Island.

The Kyiv Council expects the construction of the line to cost about $1.3 billion. According to the Ukrainian News agency, CRIG has offered to pay for 85% of the cost.

This news follows on from reports in the Kyiv Pravda online newspaper last week that CRIG was interested in building a high-speed rail link between Kyiv Central Railway Station and Boryspil International Airport.

The report quoted the Ministry of Economic Development as saying the Chinese company was interested in the Air Express project, and that it planned to hold meetings with the company on April 24.

CRIG is a subsidiary of China Railways, the second largest construction company in the world, according to the Engineering News-Record.

http://uaposition.com/latest-news/u...ys-invest-subway-bridge-high-speed-rail-link/
 
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Chinese develop transport projects in Russian region of Leningrad

26.04.2017 09:42

Author: Tatiana Kanunnikova

The government of the Leningrad region, Russia, and investors from China are going to commence soon the detailed design of projects for light rail transit (LRT) and the construction of transport hub in Devyatkino, the press office of the regional administration reports on Wednesday.

The Chinese partners have expressed their interest in investing in the construction of light rail transit lines on the territory of the Leningrad region.

“The potential for cooperation in the field of transport security is great. We have already have prepared the project design for the construction of LRT lines from St. Petersburg to Vsevolozhsk and Sertolovo, while Chinese partners have experience in the implementation of similar projects both at home and in Russia”, - the press office quotes the region’s Governor Alexander Drozdenko, following a meeting with the delegation from China’s autonomous region of Inner Mongolia.

http://russianconstruction.com/news...-projects-in-russian-region-of-leningrad.html
 
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Friday, May 5, 2017, 11:16
CRRC to build plant in Canada
By Zhong Nan in Beijing and Liu Mingtai in Changchun

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This June 12, 2016 photo shows a booth of CRRC at an expo in Kunming, Southwest China's Yunnan province. (Photo / IC)

China Railway Rolling Stock Corp, the country's railway vehicle and equipment manufacturer and exporter, announced on Thursday that it will build a plant in Canada to further expand its marketing channels in North America.

The train maker said in a statement that the new facility, located in Moncton in New Brunswick, will create more than 200 jobs in the first phase and generate more than US$1 million in tax revenue for the local government annually. The plant is capable of manufacturing heavy load, special railway vehicles and railway vehicle brakes.

The plant was jointly set up by Sichuan-based CRRC Meishan Co Ltd, a freight train maker under CRRC, Moncton-based ARS Canada Rolling Stock Inc, a local railcar manufacturer and service supplier, and a CRRC subsidiary in Hong Kong. They gained approval from the Canadian government in June 2016.

CRRC said the establishment of this facility will enhance its market presence in North America. However, the company's headquarters in Beijing did not disclose the total investment amount and designed manufacturing capacity.

The new company's main business is to carry out sales of cargo trains, research and development work for freight trains that can be operated in North America, as well as manufacturing freight trains including open-top wagons, covered wagons, tankers and flat cars.

The statement said that CRRC's long-term goal is to assemble freight trains and provide after-sale services to clients in Canada.

"Canada is rich in commodity goods including copper ore, nickel ore, iron ore, petroleum, wheat, soybean and other agricultural products. It is a good growth point for Chinese cargo train manufacturers to carry out a localization strategy in the country," said Feng Hao, a rail transportation researcher at the National Development and Reform Commission.

Feng said as CRRC's other subsidiaries such as CRRC Qingdao Sifang Co Ltd and CRRC Changchun Co Ltd have built manufacturing facilities in Illinois and Massachusetts to produce passenger trains in the United States, so it is possible for its Canadian facility to supply cargo trains to the markets in the US sooner or later.

CRRC Meishan so far has shipped more than 5,000 freight trains to the global market. It also produces special vehicles for clients in resource-rich countries such as Australia and Argentina.

Pan Shuping, general manager of CRRC Meishan, said it is necessary to conduct research and development in fast-growing markets such as Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America, because they have different standards in railway infrastructure and services.
 
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China’s oldest railway equipment maker will export the country’s first stainless steel trains to North America, according to China Daily. Philadelphia’s transit agency will buy 45 multi-level commuter rail cars, with an option for 10 more, from CRRC Tangshan Co., a unit of the state-owned China Railway Rolling Stock Co., the paper reported. It said the deal closes a loop because the rail company founded in 1881 made China’s first steam locomotive, which ran on wheels made by a Philadelphia company. But while the rail car shells are being exported from China, they still meet "Buy America" requirements because most of the parts, labor and fabrication will be handled at CRRC’s plant in Springfield, Massachusetts, according to a statement from the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. THE CONTEXT: China hopes to play a bigger role in helping the U.S. replace its aging infrastructure.

In Other Reports:
  • JET AGE: China’s first modern large jet, expected to make its maiden flight Friday in Shanghai, poses no immediate threat to Airbus SE and Boeing Co., the official Xinhua News Agency said in an analysis. The 158-174 seat C919 made by state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China Ltd. will compete with the Airbus A320 and Boeing 737, and is a step toward relying less on foreign airliners, Xinhua said. Boeing, the largest U.S. exporter, last year estimated that China will need 6,810 new planes worth $1 trillion over the next 20 years.
  • EXCESS CAPACITY: The Belt and Road Initiative, President Xi Jinping’s sweeping plan to better link China to the global economy by reviving ancient land and sea trade routes, isn’t a strategy to export excess industrial capacity, the Xinhua News Agency said. Rather, the proposal "brings shared benefits to all," Wang Yiwei, a professor at the School of International Relations at Renmin University, said at a press briefing, according to the state-run news service. THE CONTEXT: Official media has been ramping up coverage of the initiative before Xi convenes a May 14-15 summit dedicated to the initiative with 28 heads of state in Beijing.
  • INVITATION: China remains open to "any form" of U.S. involvement in Belt and Road, the Global Times reported, citing Ruan Zongze, vice president of the China Institute of International Studies. U.S. President Donald Trump shouldn’t follow the Obama administration in steering clear of the initiative, the Communist Party tabloid said.
— With assistance by Jeff Kearns, and Miao Han
https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/...-is-china-s-first-to-u-s-eye-on-chinese-media
 
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Chinese companies boost Iran's rail network
chinadaily.com.cn | 2017-05-10 14:23



Subway train assembly plant employees work at a site in Tehran, Iran, September 4, 2016. The plant is a branch of Tehran Wagon Manufacturing Co, a joint venture between Iran and China's CNR Changchun Railway Vehicles Co and the NORINCO International Cooperation Co. At present, Tehran's five subway lines, all built by Chinese companies, are in service. The building of Line 6 is also being constructed by Chinese companies and will be completed later this year, with the project costing $1.2 billion. [Photo/Xinhua]


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Employees work at a subway train assembly plant in Tehran, Iran, September 4, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Chinese-manufactured subway trains delivered to Turkey
Source: Xinhua| 2017-05-14 14:23:53|Editor: liuxin



SHIJIAZHUANG, May 14 (Xinhua) -- Chinese railway equipment manufacturer CRRC Tangshan said Sunday that it has delivered all 95 subway carriages to Turkey's port city Izmir.

The company said these trains are equipped with six-axis hinge joints that ensure smooth changes of direction.

The 19 subway trains, with 95 carriages in total, were designed for Izmir's metro transit service. The first shipment of 55 carriages have already been put into use in the city.

Each subway train has a maximum capacity of 1,286 passengers, according to CRRC Tangshan, which is based in north China's Hebei Province. The company is capable of making high-speed railway trains that run up to 350 kph.

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