Thursday, 5 January 2017

China’s major east-west high-speed railway starts operation

On Wednesday December 28th, China put into operation one of the world’s longest high-speed railways, linking the country’s prosperous eastern coast to the less-developed southwest.

The Shanghai-Kunming line — 2,252 km (1,400 miles) in length — traverses the five provinces of Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Hunan, Guizhou and Yunnan and cuts travel time from Shanghai to Kunming from 34 to 11 hours, according to China Railway Corporation.

The maximum speed is 330 km (205 miles) per hour, said Wang Jinda, a train driver.

The line is also the longest east-west high-speed railway in China. A longer rail line stretching north to south is the 2,298-km Beijing-Guangzhou line, put into operation in 2012.

China has built more than 20,000 km (1,428 miles) of high-speed rail lines. According to the government’s plan, the mileage will increase to 45,000 km (27,960 miles) by 2030. The launch of the Shanghai-Kunming line means the country’s high-speed rail grid has taken shape, connecting almost all provinces on the Chinese mainland.

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