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CHR trial run to start in Inner Mongolia



Stewardesses wearing new uniforms pose for a photo at Hohhot's CHR (China high-speed railway) service station in north China's Inner Mogolia on Jan. 6, 2015. Inner Mogolia will begin its first CHR service along the Jining to Baotou section on Jan. 8, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]




Inner Mogolia will begin its first CHR service along the Jining to Baotou section on Jan. 8, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]
 
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A new high-speed railway opened in December starting from Guiyang in Southwest China's Guizhou Province to Guangzhou in Guangdong Province.

The Guiyang-Guangzhou high-speed railway traverses through China's South and Southwest areas known for ethnic minorities and cultural hotspots.

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China looking at North-South High Speed Rail in inland west

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A Chinese HSR travels on the Guiguang (Guiyang-Guangzhou) line in Rongjiang county, Guizhou province,
26 December 2014. [Photo: Imagine China]


Chinese rail officials are meeting in Xi'an to look at the feasibility of a new high-speed rail linking Inner Mongolia in the north with Hainan island in the south.

It is under consideration in the next China 5-year planning cycle, starting 2016. The cost is unknown at this stage.

The line would cut through six provincial-level regions; from Inner Mongolia, Shaanxi, Hubei, Hunan, Guangxi, Guangdong and ending in Hainan island.

These western provinces in inland China have many beautiful areas which are popular with tourists. This new HSR will facilitate further development of tourism.

Proposed stations along this HSR include tourist cities of Yan'an, Xi'an, Zhangjiajie, Guilin, Yulin and finally in Hainan, after crossing the Qiongzhou Strait between Guangdong and Hainan.

As these provinces are home to a number of ethnic minorities, developing them will help improve their standards of living.
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A new high-speed railway opened in December starting from Guiyang in Southwest China's Guizhou Province to Guangzhou in Guangdong Province.

The Guiyang-Guangzhou high-speed railway traverses through China's South and Southwest areas known for ethnic minorities and cultural hotspots.

10923447_10153034101789759_832720598899756456_n.png


10294368_10153034101534759_6457492167124544849_n.jpg
very beautiful

:china::china::china::china::china::china::china::china::china::china::china:
 
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Record breaker: China's incredible north-south high-speed train line plan
By Virginia Lau, for CNN

Updated 0955 GMT (1755 HKT) January 8, 2015

150108142301-china-high-speed-railway-super-169.jpg

Story highlights
  • Proposed high-speed rail would connect Inner Mongolia with Hainan, which are more than 3,000 kilometers apart
  • World's longest high-speed rail line is almost 2,300 kilometers long, connecting Beijing and Guangzhou
  • Train would open access to some of China's remotest areas for tourists
(CNN) Chinese railway experts have begun talks on building a record-breaking high-speed rail that would connect Inner Mongolia in the north to Hainan in the south.

According to the Shaanxi Development and Reform Commission, the proposed line will operate at a speed of 350 kilometers per hour (217 mph).

Beginning in Inner Mongolia's Baotou city and running through southern Shaanxi, Hubei, Hunan, Guangxi and Guangdong, its final stop would be in Haikou city on Hainan Island, China's southernmost province.

Though the exact length of the proposed route has not been released, it will likely become the world's longest high-speed rail line -- smashing a record already held by China -- as the journey by road between Baotou and Haikou is approximately 3,000 kilometers (1,864 miles) long.

Currently, the world's longest high-speed rail line is almost 2,300 kilometers long (1,429 miles), running from Beijing to the southern metropolis of Guangzhou.

The proposed rail is part of China's aim to create a "Maritime Silk Road of the 21st Century" and coincides with initiatives to improve the country's comprehensive transportation network while driving land development and urbanization in seven provincial areas.

Minority issues

Many of the provinces through which the high-speed trains will travel are near major bodies of water, such as the Yellow River in Inner Mongolia and Shaanxi provinces, the Yangtze River in Hubei and the South China Sea, where the line would end.

It will also take passengers to popular tourist destinations including Zhangjiajie, Xian, Guilin and minority areas in western Hunan and Hubei.

"The country is now shifting its focus and investing in the western regions and economically underdeveloped areas, making up for China's long debt to these areas," Tan Yuzhi, professor of the School of Economics and Management at Hubei University for Nationalities, told local media.

"The project will significantly narrow regional disparities and solve minority issues."

However, Deng Hongbing, director of China University of Geosciences' Center for Regional Economic and Investment Center, said that if the north-to-south railway is to go ahead, there needs to be a sound ecological program in place to ensure the protection of these underdeveloped and ecologically sensitive areas.

Officials say the line will connect with existing high-speed routes such as Xuzhou-Lanzhou, Shanghai-Wuhan-Chengdu, Shanghai-Kunming and Guiyang-Guangzhou.

Proposal participants say they will push for the train project to be included in China's 13th five-year national development plan (2016-2020).
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1st rail operation using PMSM traction system completed
By Li Jingrong

The first rail operation using permanent magnet synchronous motor traction system, a system developed by Chinese engineers, has been successfully completed, the Beijing News reported on Tuesday.

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The first rail operation using permanent magnet synchronous motor traction system, a system developed by Chinese engineers, has been successfully completed. [File photo]

The traction system was developed by engineers at the Zhuzhou Institute Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corporation Ltd. (also known as CSR). The new technology has passed the China Railway Corporation's examination and review with this first successful rail operation, and it will therefore advance to the whole-vehicle testing and assessment stage very soon.

It is expected that PMSM high speed trains will begin operating and carrying passengers in 2016 after 300,000 kilometers of test runs.

PMSM is also known as the "next generation of rail transit" in transport service. The "debut" of PMSM rail operation indicates that China has become one of very few countries in the world to adopt the most sophisticated technology.

Feng Jianghua, vice general manager of the Zhuzhou Institute Co. Ltd., said that the PMSM traction system is well known for its high power, high efficiency, small size, light weight and low noise. The system's energy savings rate is up to 10 percent.

Feng said that the new traction system is the core technology of high speed railway. The PMSM traction system introduced by Zhuzhou is considered a breakthrough that will enable China to increase its competitiveness in the world's railway transport industry.
 
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http://www.globalrailnews.com/blog/2015/01/12/five-times-as-many-passengers-using-chinas-hsr-network-than-in-2008

Five times as many passengers using China’s HSR network than in 2008
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Photo: GuoZhongHua/ shutterstock.com.

Passenger growth on China’s high-speed rail network does justify the level of investment being made with annual passenger numbers rising from 128 million in 2008 to 672 million in 2013, a new report by the World Bank has suggested.

More than 2.9 billion passengers have travelled across China by high-speed train since April 2007 and in 2013, China’s high-speed rail network recorded 214 billion passenger kilometres – more than the rest of the world put together.

The report – High-Speed Railways in China: A Look at Traffic – seems to suggest that China’s substantial investment in high-speed rail over the past decade is being justified by the system’s increasing patronage.

The research also looks the types of passengers using high-speed trains in China and how passengers travel habits are changing because of the introduction of new high-speed routes.

Gerald Ollivier, a World Bank senior transport specialist and co-author of the paper, said: “Understanding and addressing passenger needs are critical to achieving the full impact of the high-speed rail network.

“While initial results are encouraging, high-speed rail remains a major investment that requires high traffic density to be justified economically and financially.”

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The numbers are just mind-boggling.
 
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Just another day in China...

Rail projects announced
Source:Agencies-Global Times Published: 2015-1-18 23:53:02

China has approved 53.1 billion yuan ($8.6 billion) worth of new railway projects, the nation's top economic planner said Friday.

A city metro worth 43.7 billion yuan will be built in Ji'nan, capital of East China's Shandong Province, while a railway track that costs 9.4 billion yuan will be laid in Southwest China's Yunnan Province, the National Development and Reform Commission said.
 
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China’s rail expansion shifts to intercity lines, less developed central and western regions - Global Times
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China’s rail expansion shifts to intercity lines, less developed central and western regions
By Chen Heying Source:Global Times Published: 2015-1-18 20:23:01

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A high-speed train passes Shenyang South Railway Station in Liaoning Province last November. Photo: CFP

On the 814 bus, one of the major nine bus routes between Hebei's Yanjiao township and downtown Beijing, the air was filled with the smell of commuters' breakfasts. Every day, half of the town's 300,000 residents reportedly squeeze into packed vehicles to commute. To ease the traffic pressure, bullet trains began taking Yanjiao's commuters to and from Beijing each day as of January 12, cutting the travel time in half.

However, most of Yanjiao's commuters cannot take the train due to the limited number of seats.

But the commuters from Yanjiao and other areas around Beijing may find travel easier soon as more intercity railways are expected to be built.

Hebei Province has said that it will build four rail lines, including routes between Beijing's Yizhuang area and the Hebei's Langfang, and between Beijing's Fangshan district and Hebei's Zhuozhou, news portal people.cn reported.

These projects are part of a new wave of railway construction planned for the coming few years.

As of the end of 2014, China has over 110,000 kilometers of railways, 15,000 kilometers of which are high-speed railways.

Although the details of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) for railway development, drafted by the National Railway Administration and submitted to higher authorities for deliberation in January 2015, have not yet been revealed, railway experts predict that railway development in less developed regions, as well as the growth of intercity and suburban routes will be a priority and that investment in these areas will remain high.

Westward railway development

"As most major trunk lines have been built in eastern regions while railways in middle and western China are weakly linked, future investment is expected to focus on central and western regions to drive economic development there," Cheng Shidong, a director at the Institute of Comprehensive Transportation with the National Development and Reform Commission, told the Global Times. The majority of the railway projects approved last year are to be built in those areas, Cheng said.

In one month alone, the NDRC approved three railway projects worth more than 10-billion yuan ($1.61 billion) each in central and western regions, including Chongqing Municipality, Henan, Hubei and Hunan provinces and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the 21st Century Business Herald reported.

In September 2014, Premier Li Keqiang stressed that infrastructure construction will tilt toward central and western regions during the 13th Five-Year Plan.

The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is often mentioned as being a key area for infrastructure development by rail experts on account of its strategic significance for the country's Silk Road Economic Belt initiative and the need to maintain stability.

"One prerequisite for making Xinjiang a new engine of China's economic growth is to construct railways, facilitating easy travel to sparsely populated areas," said Gao Bai, a sociology professor with Duke University in the US.

After labor-intensive industries are transferred to Xinjiang, [agricultural] products manufactured in Xinjiang can be exported to Central Asia, the Middle East and Europe by train, which is much faster than transporting goods by sea, Gao told the Global Times.

President Xi Jinping proposed in 2013 that China and Central Asian nations collaborate in building the Silk Road Economic Belt.

"[Besides,] strengthening the connection between the capital Urumqi and other cities in Xinjiang, intercity railways will play a role in maintaining its social stability," said Wang Mengshu, a senior rail expert from the Chinese Academy of Engineering.

Wang said that when cities in Xinjiang are connected by high speed rail links, the government will encourage more businesses to move to the region from eastern and central China, stimulating the local economy and providing job opportunities for locals.

2015 will witness the launch of three intercity railways from Urumqi to the southern Xinjiang cities of Turpan, Korla as well as the Zhundong development zone in northern Xinjiang, which is rich in oil and coal.

Cheng Zhongxing, a deputy director of the high-speed railway development study center at Southwest Jiaotong University, expressed regret over the fact that the high-speed rail link between Urumqi and Beijing that will start full operation in 2017 is not as fast as it could have been.

"The top speed was originally going to be 350 kilometers per hour, at which pace passengers can arrive in Beijing in eight hours, while now the top speed is only 200 kilometers," he said. "Eight hours could have meant a much closer mental attachment to China's capital for Xinjiang."

Intercity and suburban railways

Following the completion of major high-speed railway lines across China, the focus will be shifted onto facilitating short trips via the construction of intercity railways among city clusters and building suburban railways for commuters, Cheng Shidong said.

"Since cities in the Yangtze River Delta in East China, including Shanghai, Nanjing and Ningbo, have strong economic ties with each other, frequent business trips among the cities will need intercity railways," he said, adding that the Pearl River Delta in South China also boasts these kinds of "mature economic circles."

However, there are only a few "mature economic circles" in China, Cheng Shidong said, adding that "laying intercity railways will be a mid- and long-term strategy when more circles emerge."

Guangxi, Shandong and Zhejiang have disclosed their intercity railway plans. Zhejiang's plans to construct four intercity railway networks - with cities including Hangzhou, Ningbo, Wenzhou and Taizhou as hubs - were approved by the NDRC in late December. Journeys between the cities and counties will take only one hour, the National Business Daily reported on December 24.

Zhao Jian, a professor at Beijing Jiaotong University, agreed with Cheng and said suburban railways will also be on the agenda.

"Metropolises have numerous residents that live in suburbs. About 40,000 kilometers of tracks are expected to be laid for commuters, which will provide ample room for the development of suburban railways," Zhao told the Global Times.

Debate over further expansion

Experts agreed that large-scale investment in railway construction will be maintained, given the risks China faces from its economic downturn and excess production capacity.

"As China has suffered from slower economic growth, the government will resort to investment in railways, which is a feasible way to boost the real economy," Gao said, adding that other sectors, such as the solar and property development industries have already faced the problem of overbuilt production capacity.

Also, the cement and steel industries have already suffered from overproduction, a problem that can be ameliorated by railway construction, said Cheng Zhongxing.

However, Zhao called for the construction of high-speed railways to halt in July as the debts racked up by the State-owned China Railway Corporation have surpassed 3 trillion yuan and most high-speed railways cannot earn enough profit to justify the necessary investment due to inadequate passenger numbers.
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Beijing-Shanghai high speed passenger train turns a profit for the first time

Posted on January 25, 2015

The Beijing-Shanghai High Speed passenger train began service on June 30, 2011, leaving Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station for the first time.

In 2014, it transported 100 million passenger-trips, sold 30 billion yuan of tickets with an expected profit of 1.2 billion yuan.

The concept of a high speed railroad between Beijing and Shanghai was first proposed in 1990. Construction began in 2008, and the railroad was completed in three and a half years with a total investment of 208.84 billion yuan.

In 2012, the railway had a revenue of 17.38 billion yuan and operated at a loss of 3.716 billion yuan. In 2013, it had a revenue of 22.258 billion yuan with a loss of 1.294 billion yuan. In 2014, it had a revenue of 30 billion yuan with an expected profit of 1.2 billion yuan.

The railroad is acredited for “pulling forward” the economies of 24 cities along the route. In 2011, 143 trains were in operation. In 2012, there were 175 trains in operation. In 2013, there were 198 trains in operation, and in 2014, there were 259 trains in operation. In 2012, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 67.7%. In 2013, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 76.9%, and in 2014, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 77.9%.

Beijing-Shanghai high speed passenger train turns a profit for the first time | Isotonic Rehabilitation
 
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Beijing-Shanghai high speed passenger train turns a profit for the first time

Posted on January 25, 2015

The Beijing-Shanghai High Speed passenger train began service on June 30, 2011, leaving Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station for the first time.

In 2014, it transported 100 million passenger-trips, sold 30 billion yuan of tickets with an expected profit of 1.2 billion yuan.

The concept of a high speed railroad between Beijing and Shanghai was first proposed in 1990. Construction began in 2008, and the railroad was completed in three and a half years with a total investment of 208.84 billion yuan.

In 2012, the railway had a revenue of 17.38 billion yuan and operated at a loss of 3.716 billion yuan. In 2013, it had a revenue of 22.258 billion yuan with a loss of 1.294 billion yuan. In 2014, it had a revenue of 30 billion yuan with an expected profit of 1.2 billion yuan.

The railroad is acredited for “pulling forward” the economies of 24 cities along the route. In 2011, 143 trains were in operation. In 2012, there were 175 trains in operation. In 2013, there were 198 trains in operation, and in 2014, there were 259 trains in operation. In 2012, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 67.7%. In 2013, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 76.9%, and in 2014, the average passenger occupancy rate per train trip was 77.9%.

Beijing-Shanghai high speed passenger train turns a profit for the first time | Isotonic Rehabilitation


Is it only operational profit?
What about the initial investment?
When will the whole investment break even and start producing net profits?
Actually if there was operating profit for the first time, it is nothing to boast about, from a commercial standpoint. Companies invest to earn profit, which is net profit, after covering the costs of initial fixed investments.
 
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Is it only operational profit?
What about the initial investment?
When will the whole investment break even and start producing net profits?
Actually if there was operating profit for the first time, it is nothing to boast about, from a commercial standpoint. Companies invest to earn profit, which is net profit, after covering the costs of initial fixed investments.

It is a state-owned enterprise. Not necessarily profit-oriented.

Besides, direct economic return is only one of the aspects in large-scale social/developmental projects. There are many additional benefits such as greater national mobility, integration, land development and appreciation, technology transfer, national image (Premier Li's one of biggest selling points in his state visits, for instance) which may or may not be translated into direct monetary profit. Besides, this kind of infrastructure projects are multi-generational.
 
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It is a state-owned enterprise. Not necessarily profit-oriented.

Besides, direct economic return is only one of the aspects in large-scale social/developmental projects. There are many additional benefits such as greater national mobility, integration, land development and appreciation, technology transfer, national image (Premier Li's one of biggest selling points in his state visits, for instance) which may or may not be translated into direct monetary profit. Besides, this kind of infrastructure projects are multi-generational.


As a scientist, engineer, and amateur economist, I like numbers.
Please quantify everything you have said.
How much in dollar terms is the indirect advantage? What are the opportunity costs of those advantages?
I would like a detailed analysis.
 
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It is a state-owned enterprise. Not necessarily profit-oriented.

Besides, direct economic return is only one of the aspects in large-scale social/developmental projects. There are many additional benefits such as greater national mobility, integration, land development and appreciation, technology transfer, national image (Premier Li's one of biggest selling points in his state visits, for instance) which may or may not be translated into direct monetary profit. Besides, this kind of infrastructure projects are multi-generational.

It is becoming darn hard to buy tickets on many HSR routes,even for trains with departure intervals of 20 mins or less。:devil:
 
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