BEIJING, Oct. 7 (Xinhua) -- Beijing opened a new
subway line on Sunday in a bid to boost public transport and ease road
congestion ahead of the Olympics.
Beijing's No. 5 subway line, which runs through the
heart of the city from north to south, opened at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, when the
week-long National Day holiday ended.
The 27.6-km line, after nearly five years'
construction, is installed with 23 stations and runs from Tiantongyuan North
Station in northern Beijing's Changping district to Songjiazhuang Station in
southern Fengtai district.
"The launch of the No. 5 subway line indicates that
Beijing's rail transport is on a track of fast development," said Liu Qi, a
member of the Political Bureau of the CPC (Communist Party of China) Central
Committee and secretary of the CPC Beijing Municipal Committee, at the opening
ceremony.
"It is of great significance for the city to ease
traffic pressure, provide easier transport for the public, ... speed up
construction of Olympic infrastructure, and ensure a high-level Olympic Games,"
he said.
Equipped with a wireless communication network, live
broadcasts will be provided on televisions installed in each subway car and
passengers will never lose the signal on their mobile phones.
The subway cars are wider and taller than the ones
operating on the older lines and are designed to reach speeds of 80 km per hour.
Elevators designed to aid disabled people have been installed.
Construction of the new subway line began in December
2002 and involved 12 billion yuan (about 1.6 billion U.S. dollars) in
investment.
Prior to this, Beijing had four subway lines with a
total mileage of 114 km transporting about 1.15 million passengers daily,15
percent of the total commuters.
According to the municipal government, Beijing will
add three subway lines next year and the total mileage will reach 200 km.
The launch of the new subway line is among Beijing's
recent efforts to boost public transport, ease road congestion and improve air
quality ahead of the Olympics.
Also on Sunday, a new subway pricing system was
adopted, cutting subway fares by about 30 percent. Now a one-way ticket costs
just two yuan (27 U.S. cents), nearly the price of a bottle of purified water,
no matter how long one travels and how many times one transfers between lines.
"The urban public transport should be given
priority...and the related services should be improved consistently," Chinese
Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan told the opening ceremony.
Local people lined up in front of the ticket offices
of the new subway line on Sunday morning to enjoy the new service first or just
to buy a commemorative ticket.
"I used to spend more than an hour and change subway
lines twice for work, but now I can save 20 minutes and only need to change once
with the opening of the new line," said Wang Jing, a local resident.
"Besides, I can save one yuan each time," she said.
Taking into account the inevitable rise of the number
of subway passengers, local traffic authorities have promised to increase subway
trains and shorten intervals between trains to boost the transport capacity.
Meanwhile, the government will increase expenditure
on public transport by 1 billion yuan (133 million U.S. dollars) annually after
the single price scheme is adopted, Liu Tongliang, head of the Beijing Municipal
Transportation Administration Bureau, has said.
Road congestion has been a major problem yet to be
solved for the Chinese capital, a city with a population of 16 million and more
than 3 million registered vehicles, and citizens have been urged to take public
transport to ease traffic pressure.
Before the launch of the new subway line and the
reduction of subway fares, the municipal government has been giving discounts of
up to 60 percent for residents -- and even 80 percent for students --- for bus
tickets since the beginning of this year to encourage people to choose public
transport.
"The city aims to raise the proportion of citizens
choosing public transport from current 30 percent to 45 percent by 2015, and the
subway passenger volume will increase to 8 million a day from current 2.2
million," said Zhou Nansen, of the Beijing Municipal Commission of Urban
Planning.
To achieve this goal, Beijing will raise the number
of buses from 18,000 to 21,000 by 2010, and extend the metro line from present
114 km to at least 270 km, according to Liu Xiaoming, deputy director of the
Beijing Municipal Commission of Communications.
As the host of next year's Olympic Games, Beijing has
been working on easing traffic congestion, reducing environmental pollution and
improving air quality to ensure "Green Olympics."
The municipal government has urged local residents to
less drive private cars, which numbers more than 2 million in the city, to
reduce pollution of auto exhaust, such as the launch of "no car day."
The city is also considering a traffic ban during the
period ofOlympics, in which drivers with even-numbered and odd-numbered license
plates, excluding taxis, buses and emergency vehicles, will be told to stay off
the roads on alternate dates or face fines.
During a four-day test of the traffic ban launched
from Aug. 17to 20, about 1.3 million cars were barred from the city roads each
day and the amount of pollutants discharged was cut by 5,815.2 tons, according
to a report released by Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau.