BEIJING, Jan.
9 --Xie Lingxia always carries three travel cards in her purse, for
the respective transport systems of Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Hong Kong.
A worker at the Hong Kong office of Danish shipping
firm Maersk, Xie said: "Often I'm in Hong Kong, Shenzhen and Guangzhou on the
same day.
"My husband works in Guangzhou, so sometimes I start
the day in Hong Kong, go to Shenzhen in the afternoon, and end up in Guangzhou,"
she said.
"The transport system is great, especially the
express train, but that's expensive.
"I used to think about applying for a job at the
Guangzhou office to be close to my husband, but I can earn more money in Hong
Kong and with the good transport system, traveling is easy," she said.
Last week at a meeting of the Guangdong political
consultative conference, Governor Huang Huahua said the province has budgeted 80
billion yuan (11.7 billion U.S. dollars) for the initial phase of an intercity
light rail project linking Guangzhou with Dongguan, Shenzhen and Zhuhai, the
other major cities within the delta.
The government will spend 350 billion yuan to build a
rail network stretching 1,900 km in the Pearl River Delta region by 2050, he
said.
The Guangzhou-Zhuhai intercity light rail project and
Guangzhou-Foshan metro project, with a total cost of 27 billion yuan, are due
for completion in 2010, he said at the conference.
Meanwhile, the Guangzhou-Dongguan-Shenzhen,
Dongguan-Huizhou, Guangzhou-Huadu-Qingyuan, and Zhongshan-Nansha-Humen projects,
costing 70 billion yuan, will open in 2015, he said.
The total length of track lines will be 1,100 km by
2012, he said.
"The projects are designed to integrate the transport
infrastructure and shorten travel time between Guangzhou and any other city in
the delta region to less than an hour," Huang said.
The province has also budgeted 220 billion yuan for
the construction of expressways network in the province, he said.
By 2012, the region will have 3,000 km of
expressways, he said.
Ding Li, a researcher with the Guangdong Academy of
Social Sciences, said: "The decision to increase spending on transport
infrastructure will help boost demand amid the financial crisis and flatten the
traffic bottleneck that would otherwise challenge Guangdong province's
development in the future.
"An integrated network will also change the way
people live," he said
They will be able to live in a place where housing is
cheap, but work in another, Ding said.
(Source: China Daily)