XI'AN, May 8 (Xinhua) -- China began Thursday to lay tracks for the first
high-speed passenger line in its western region, which will ultimately shorten
trips between the ancient capital of Xi'an and Beijing to four hours from the
current 11.
The 500-km line linking Xi'an in northwestern Shaanxi Province with
Zhengzhou in central Henan will run at up to 350 km per hour.
"When it becomes operational at the end of this year, a ride between the
two cities will take less than two hours compared with the present six," said Li
Hengman, deputy manager of the Zhengzhou-Xi'an Railway Company, operator of the
10.3-billion-U.S.dollar project.
He said the track-laying would be completed by June 10 and the railway was
scheduled to be operational on Dec. 28.
Construction began in late 2005. It involved building tunnels in the craggy
mountains and reinforcing the loose, sandy earth to support tracks and trains on
the loess plateau.
The new route will connect to trunk railways including the north-south
Beijing-Guangzhou Railway, while a trip from Shanghai to Xi'an will take only
five hours compared with the current 15.
China's first inter-city express railway, the Beijing-Tianjin line running
at more than 300 km/hr, opened in August. A trip takes 30 minutes.
Last month, China launched two 250-km-per-hour inter-city passenger lines,
one connecting Hefei, capital of eastern Anhui Province, with Wuhan in central
Hubei Province and the other, linking Shijiazhuang city near Beijing with
Taiyuan in Shanxi Province.
The Beijing-Shanghai high-speed railway will be completed by 2012 and halve
travel time to about five hours.