China News Thread

vincent

Grumpy Old Man
Staff member
Moderator - World Affairs
It makes no economic sense. This railway is purely strategic project.
Of course it is. Lots of poverty alleviation programs and infrastructure building in the hinterlands exist because the Chinese government needs to convince people there it is beneficial to stay in China.
The Chinese government is fighting separatism by improving people’s lives
 
It makes no economic sense. This railway is purely strategic project.
Of course it is. Lots of poverty alleviation programs and infrastructure building in the hinterlands exist because the Chinese government needs to convince people there it is beneficial to stay in China.
The Chinese government is fighting separatism by improving people’s lives

Do not discount the competence of China's leaders.

At very least, this makes more socio-economic sense than investing in US treasury.
 

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
It makes no economic sense. This railway is purely strategic project.

It's a slow single-track railway, so it is the lowest-cost type of railway that you can build, especially since it is running on flat land in the desert. There are multiple objectives.

1. Better transport for the roughly 12 million people in Southern Xinjiang

2. Freight transport costs will be cheaper along the railway for those people, companies and for mines

3. Shorter rail distances (and therefore cost/speed improvements) to
a) China's border areas next to India
b) military bases like Hotan Airbase etc
c) the Chinese border with Pakistan
d) the upcoming China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan railway to Iran, Turkey, Europe and Central Asia

It wouldn't work out solely on a financial profitability basis by itself, but I think there are sufficient overall benefits which make sense.
 

gelgoog

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Yeah they did try to keep costs down on the track. I agree with that. But the mere fact it is built in that place increases costs tremendously.
 

NiuBiDaRen

Brigadier
Registered Member
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China will complete the world's first railway loop around a desert, at 2,712 kilometers and around the vast Taklimakan Desert, when a new 825-kilometer section opens on Thursday in Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, state-owned railway operator China State Railway Group announced on Wednesday.

The Hotan-Ruoqiang railway, which connects Hotan city in southwestern Xinjiang and Ruoqiang county in the southeast, with a journey taking just under 11 and a half hours, has a designed speed of 120 kilometers per hour and 22 stations. The line can be electrified in the future.

The Taklimakan Desert, with a size slightly smaller than Germany, is the world's second-largest shifting sand desert. The Hotan-Ruoqiang railway has 534 kilometers, or 65 percent of its total length, facing the threats of wind and sand, and engineers have battled with these problems since construction began in December 2018.

Five bridges with a total length of 49.7 kilometers were built with trains running on top of these bridges, while sand moves below. The builders created 50 million square meters of grass grids and planted 13 million sand-loving plants such as sea buckthorn to protect the railway.

Together with three existing railways that trim the desert, the operation of the Hotan-Ruoqiang railway will make the world's first railway loop around a desert a reality. The new line will further boost railway connections in the western border areas and facilitate the flow of people and goods, and the development of regions along their routes, with the effect of boosting ethnic unity, bolstering national defense and promoting rural revitalization, the company said.

Sun Zhang, a mass transit expert and professor at Shanghai Tongji University, told the Global Times on Wednesday that the loop railway's lift to regional economic development won't be measured by addition but by multiplication, and the railway is set to greatly boost the economy of southern Xinjiang.

The relatively low speed of the railway means it can carry both passengers and cargo, which will be a boon for the resource-rich region, Sun said.

With the construction of the China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan (CKU) railway seeing positive signs of getting started after years of delay, the loop railway connecting all parts of southern Xinjiang will help the circulation of goods both domestically and internationally. Kashi, a hub, could become a connecting point of international and domestic circulation, Sun predicted.

The CKU railway would potentially be the shortest route to transport goods from China to Europe and the Middle East, cutting the journey by 900 kilometers and saving seven to eight days of travel time.

As of the end of 2021, the total operating length of railways across China exceeded 150,000 kilometers, including more than 40,000 kilometers of high-speed railways.
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Are they doing filming for Snowpiercer Part Three?
 

KYli

Brigadier
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China regained over 6.7 million hectares of land from desertification in 2021, according to the country's forestry authority.

The data was released by the National Forestry and Grassland Administration(NFGA) on Thursday ahead of the International Day Against Desertification and Drought.

The event which falls on June 17 every year is designed to promote public awareness of international efforts to combat desertification, which is among the greatest threats to sustainable development, especially in developing countries, according to the UN. This year's theme is "Rising up from drought together".

According to the NFGA, China cut back desertification and rocky desertification by over 6.7 million hectares and over two million hectares respectively in 2021. Earlier date shows that from 2016 to 2020, China reclaimed nearly 11 million hectares of land from desertification.
NFGA attributed the achievement to the multi-pronged actions by the central and local governments: including central governments' financial support, scientists research efforts, individuals' participation in the national forestation campaign, international cooperation, among others.
 
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