World’s longest bullet train service begins in China
CHINA: China started service Wednesday on the world's longest
high-speed rail route, the latest milestone in the country's rapid and
-- sometimes troubled -- super fast rail network.
The opening of the new 2,298-kilometre (1,425-mile) line between
Beijing and Guangzhou means passengers will be whisked from the capital
to the southern commercial hub in less than a third of the 22 hours
previously required.
China Central Television broadcast the departure of the first train
live from Beijing West Railway Station. It also carried live reports
from inside showing passengers toting cameras to apparently snap
commemorative photos.
Trains will travel at an average speed of 300 kilometres per hour
over the line, which includes 35 stops in major cities such as
Zhengzhou, Wuhan on the Yangtze River and Changsha.
State media have reported that December 26 was chosen to start
passenger service on the Beijing-Guangzhou line to commemorate the birth
in 1893 of revered Chinese leader Mao Zedong.
The Beijing-Guangzhou route was made possible with the completion of
a line between Zhengzhou and Beijing. High-speed sections linking
Zhengzhou and Wuhan and Wuhan and Guangzhou were already in service.
China's high-speed rail network was established in 2007, but has fast
become the world's largest with 8,358 kilometres of track at the end of
2010. That is expected to almost double to 16,000 kilometres by 2020.
The train's opening means that the train will be in service over
China's Lunar New Year holiday period, which falls in mid-February next
year.
Hundreds of millions of people travel across the country during that
period to visit their ancestral hometowns in the world's largest annual
migration.
AFP
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