BEIJING, Jan. 3 (Xinhua) -- Controversy over
the construction of the Shanghai-Hangzhou magnetic levitation train line looks likely
to continue following the release of an environmental assessment report on
Wednesday, which says the rail link will have minimal impact on the local
environment.
The report, compiled by the Shanghai Academy of
Environmental Sciences, focuses on the 31.8-km Shanghai section of the train
line connecting Longyang Road with Hongqiao, home to the city's second
international airport.
Xinhua reported in May last year that the project had
been suspended due to fierce opposition from people living near the railway over
radiation fears, particularly as the track would be separated from communities
along the route by a greenbelt measuring only 22.5 meters wide.
Less than a week later, the Shanghai government
denied the suspension and the State Environmental Protection Administration
(SEPA) announced it would carry out an assessment.
The new report, published on the municipal
government's Shanghai Environment Online website, says the greenbelt buffer zone
will remain 22.5 meters wide even though a blueprint designed by the local
government shows a protection belt 150 meters wide on either side. German
specifications require a 300-meter leeway on both sides of the track.
However, the maximum speed along the Shanghai section
of the route will be limited to 200 km per hour, less than half of the 450 km
per hour planned for the remainder of the railway to Hangzhou.
The maglev line will not affect water and air
quality, and noise pollution can be controlled, the report says.
"From an environmental protection perspective, the
constructionof the line is feasible," it concludes.
It also claims the project can be completed in time
for the World Expo in Shanghai in 2010 despite Wang Qingyun, a transport
official with the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), saying last
May, "It's still hard to say whether the maglev will be built, but if it is it
won't be possible to complete it before 2010."
The Shanghai authorities say the report is now open
for citizens to comment on until January 15 before it is passed to SEPA and the
NDRC.
The 35-billion-yuan (4.5 billion US dollars)
Shanghai-Hangzhou maglev project using German technology, is designed to cover
the 175 kilometers between Shanghai and Hangzhou.
If completed, it will be the world's second
commercial high-speed maglev track. Shanghai operates the world's only
commercial maglev system on a 30-kilometer stretch between Shanghai's business
district and Pudong airport.