Rail transport in China

People's Republic of China

Logos of the China Railway Corporation and the China Railway High-speed passenger service
Operation
Major operators China Railway Corporation
Statistics
Ridership 2.357 billion passenger trips[1]
Passenger km 1,160.48 billion passenger-kilometers[1]
Freight 3.813 billion tons[1]
System length
Total 121,000 km (75,000 mi)[2]
Double track 57,000 km (35,000 mi)[1]
Electrified 65,000 km (40,000 mi)[1]
High-speed 16,000 km (9,900 mi)[1]
Track gauge
Main 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
High-speed 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge 79,685 kilometres (49,514 mi) (1998)
1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge 466 kilometres (290 mi)
750 mm (2 ft 5 12 in) 3,600 kilometres (2,200 mi) (1998 est.)
Features
No. tunnels 6,102 (2008)
Tunnel length 3,938.9 kilometres (2,447.5 mi) (2008)[3]
Longest tunnel Taihang Tunnel
27.848 kilometres (17.304 mi)
No. bridges 47,524 (2008)[3]
Longest bridge Danyang–Kunshan Grand Bridge
164.8 kilometres (102.4 mi)
No. stations 5,470 (2008)[3]
Highest elevation 5,072 metres (16,640 ft)[4]
 at Tanggula Pass
Map

Rail transport is an important mode of long-distance transportation in the People's Republic of China. As of 2015, the country has 121,000 km (75,186 mi)[5] of railways, the second longest network in the world,[5] including 19,000 kilometres (11,806 miles) of high-speed rail (HSR), the longest HSR network in the world.[6]

Almost all rail operations are handled by the China Railway Corporation, a state-owned company created in March 2013 from dissolution of the Ministry of Railways.

China's railways are among the busiest in the world. In 2014, railways in China delivered 2.357 billion passenger trips, generating 1,160.48 billion passenger-kilometers and carried 3.813 billion tons of freight, generating 2,753 billion cargo ton-kilometers.[1]

Driven by need to increase freight capacity, the railway network has expanded with the country budgeting $130.4 billion for railway investment in 2014, and has a long term plan to expand the network to 274,000 km (170,000 mi) by 2050. China built 9,000 km of new railway in 2015.[7]

History

Qing Dynasty (1876–1911)

The opening of the short-lived Woosung Road, the first railway in China, between Shanghai and Wusong in 1876.

The first railway to be built in China was a 600-meter narrow gauge demonstration line that a British merchant assembled in Beijing in 1864 to demonstrate rail technology. The Qing government was uninterested and had the line dismantled. The first railroad to enter commercial service was the Woosung Railway, a 9 ¼ mi (14 km) railway from Shanghai to Woosung (modern Shanghai's Baoshan District) which opened in 1876. This was also built by the British, without approval from the Qing government, which had the line dismantled one year later. Until the defeat of China in the First Sino-Japanese War, the government remained hostile toward railway construction. Beginning in 1895, the government began to grant rail concessions to foreigners, and permitted direct connection to the capital Beijing.

Zhan Tianyou, the "father of China's railways"

By 1911, there were about 9,000 km of railroads in China, mostly designed, built, owned and operated by foreign companies. The first indigenous designed and constructed railway by Chinese is the Beijing-Zhangjiakou Railway built from 1905 to 1909, a difficult job due to the mountainous terrain. The chief engineer of this railway was Zhan Tianyou, who is known as the Father of China's Railway.[8][9]

Republic of China (1912–1949)

A train on the South Manchurian Railway in northeastern China. The railway was built by Czarest Russia from 1898 to 1903 and seized by Imperial Japan after the Russo-Japanese War.

During the Republic of China era from 1912 until 1949, the development of the railway network in China slowed due to repeated civil wars and the invasion of Japan in the Second Sino-Japanese War. One of the few exceptions was in Northeastern China (Manchuria). During the reign of the Fengtian warlord from 1912 till 1931, several railway lines were built. The South Manchuria Railway Company by Japanese was founded in 1906 and after the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905), Japan took over the operation of the Chinese Far East Railway (東清鐵路) at Changchun city and southward and kept development going vigorously. In 1945, just after the Second Sino-Japanese War, there were 27,000 km of rail, nearly half of which, 13,000 km, was located in Manchuria.[10]

People's Republic of China (1949–)

The opening ceremony of the Chengdu–Chongqing Railway in 1953. The Chengyu Railway was the first railroad built after the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949.

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China, the new government under Mao Zedong invested heavily in the railway network. From the 1950s to the 70s, lines, especially those in western China, were expanded. One example is the 1900 km railway from Lanzhou to Ürümqi, which was built between 1952 and 1962. In Southwestern China, where difficult terrain prevails, several mountain railways were constructed, such as the Baoji–Chengdu Railway, built in the 1950s, and the Chengkun Railway, built in the 1970s. The railway to Tibet, one of the highest in the world, was finally completed and opened to the public in 2006. Today, every province-level entity of the People's Republic, with the exception of Macau, is connected to the railway network.

Not only has the Chinese railway network expanded in size since 1949, but it has also seen great technological advances. Before the 1980s, most of the railways were powered by steam, due to low labour costs and cheap coal prices. However, the first diesel locomotive, the Dongfeng, was introduced in 1959. During the 1980s and 90s, diesel and electric locomotives gradually replaced the steam engines on main lines. However, steam locomotives didn't retire from some provincial railways until the 21st century. In December 2005, the world's last regular revenue mainline steam train finished its journey on the Jitong railway, marking the end of the steam era. Nevertheless, there are still some steam locomotives used in the industrial railways in China.

A steam locomotive and a diesel locomotive near the Badaling Great Wall in Beijing in 1979.

From 1990 to 2001, on average some 1,092 km of new railways, 837 km of multiple-track, and 962 km of electrified railways were opened to traffic annually, 2.4-fold, 1.7-fold and 1.8-fold increases respectively over the previous 10 years. At the end of 2004, railways in operation reached 74,200 km, including 24,100 km of multiple track and 18,900 km of electrified railways.

Since 1997, train speed has been raised significantly six times. The top speed of express trains increased from 120 km to 200 km per hour, and passenger trains can reach maximum speed of 350 km per hour on some sections of the arterial railways.

In March 2013, the Ministry of Railways was dissolved and its safety and regulation duties were taken up by the Ministry of Transport, inspection duties by the State Railway Administration and construction and management by the China Railway Corporation(CR).

Railway administration

Railways in China are defined into three main legal categories: national railways, local railways and designated railways.[11] National railways are managed by the State Council of the national government and account for the bulk of railways in China.[11] Local railways, which are operated by provincial or municipal governments, totaled a mere 40,000 km in 2013, less than 4% of the national total.[12] Designated railways are operated by enterprises such as mines and steel mills.[11] Since the 1980s, the national and local governments have jointly funded railway construction, sometimes using private capital. Joint stock railways constituted about 32% of the national network in 2013.[12] The Luoding Railway in Guangdong province, built as a joint-stock railway with investments from the local and national governments in 2001, was gradually privatized and is one of the few privately owned passenger railways.

For over fifty years, except for a brief interlude during the Cultural Revolution, all national railways were operated and regulated by the Ministry of Railways of the People's Republic of China. In March 2013, the State Council broke up the Railway Ministry into the National Railway Administration to oversee railway regulation and the China Railway Corporation, a state-owned company, to operate the national railways. The National Railway Administration is a sub-ministerial bureau assigned to the Ministry of Transport. The China Railway Corporation is a ministerial-level state company under the State Council. The last railway minister, Sheng Guangzu, became the general manager of the China Railway Corp. He outranks Lu Dongfu, the chief of the National Administration of Railways, who had previously been a deputy railway minister.

Railway bureaus and management

The China Railway Corporation assumed most of the assets of the Ministry of Railways and continues to manage the railways at three levels—the national level, the bureau or subsidiary company level, and the station level. Below are the 18 rail bureaus of the China Rail Corporation and the number of passenger stations each bureau managed in 2013.[13] The National Railway Administration has seven oversight bureaus, based in Shenyang, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Wuhan, Xian and Lanzhou, to oversee these China Railway bureaus.

Revenues and investments

A passenger train leaving the Shanghai Railway Station.

In 2013, railway transport generated Y605 billion in revenues, an increase of 14.1% from the year before.[12]

To meet growing demand for rail service, the state is making large investments in rolling stock and infrastructure. In 2013, investments in rail totaled Y808.8 billion, of which Y662.3 billion on rail infrastructure, and Y146.5 billion on rolling stock.[1]

Employment

The railways employed 2,184,400 workers in 2013, an increase of 139,000 from the year before.[12] Worker output averaged Y482,600 per person.[12]

Energy use

In 2014, the railways consumed 16.526 million tons of coal equivalent of energy, a decrease of 4.6% or 801,000 tons from 2013.[1] It took 4.51 tons of coal equivalent to transport one million ton-km of freight.[1]

Track network

As of 2014, the length of railways in China totaled 112,000 km (69,594 mi), including 16,000 kilometres (9,942 miles) of high-speed rail (HSR).[1][14] China had the second longest railway network in the world and the longest high-speed rail network.[1][14] All provinces and regions are connected by rail except Macau.

In 2011, the network length was about 91,000 kilometres (56,545 miles), including 41.1% double tracked (37,000 km) and 46.6% electrified (42,000 km).[15] As of 2014 50.8% of the railroad was double-tracked (57,000 kilometres (35,418 miles)) and 58.3% was electrified (65,000 kilometres (40,389 miles)).[1] The railway network's density was 116.48 km per 10,000 km2.[1]

Map of railways in China, with high-speed rail lines shown in color. (Note: The central government of the People's Republic of China, through the state-owned China Railway Corporation, operates only railways in Mainland China. Railways in Hong Kong are operated by the MTR Corporation. Railways in Taiwan are operated by the Taiwan Railways Administration, the official railroad agency of the Ministry of Transportation and Communication of the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Rail track length
Yearkm±% p.a.
194921,800    
195525,600+2.71%
196033,900+5.78%
196536,400+1.43%
197041,000+2.41%
197546,000+2.33%
198053,300+2.99%
1985 55,000+0.63%
1990 57,800+1.00%
1995 62,400+1.54%
2000 68,700+1.94%
2005 75,400+1.88%
2007 77,966+1.69%
2008 79,687+2.21%
2009 85,818+7.69%
2010 90,504+5.46%
2011 93,200+2.98%
2012 97,600+4.72%
2013 103,144+5.68%
2014 112,000+8.59%
2015 121,000+8.04%
Source: 历史统计:金砖国家历年铁路营业里程比较(1838~2010) National Bureau of Statistics of China

These route length are increased by average approx 6,100 km (3,800 mi) annually between 2010-2015.

China's railway network has been expanding rapidly in recent years. The total track length was 154,600 km (2007).[16][17]

Track gauge

The 2 ft 6 in (762 mm) gauge Jiayang Coal Railway in Sichuan Province.

Mainlines

Sixteen major rail corridors consisting of eight running north–south, called verticals, eight running east–west, called horizontals, connect 81 major cities.[18] The 16 mainlines were designated in January 2001, when some 3,980 kilometres (2,470 mi) of the lines were still unbuilt. At that time, the existing mainlines accounted 43% of the railroads in the country but carried 80% of the passengers.[18] The last of the vertical mainlines was completed in 2009 and the last horizontal line opened in 2010.[19]

Eight Verticals

  1. Beijing–Harbin Railway
  2. East Coast Corridor
  3. Beijing–Shanghai Railway
  4. Beijing–Kowloon Railway
  5. Beijing–Guangzhou Railway
  6. Datong–Zhanjiang Corridor (Datong–Puzhou, Taiyuan–Jiaozuo, Luoyang–Zhanjiang)
  7. Baotou–Liuzhou Corridor (Baotou–Shenmu, Shenmu–Yan'an, Xi'an–Yan'an, Xi'an–Ankang, Xiangyang–Chongqing, Sichuan–Guizhou, Guizhou–Guangxi)
  8. Lanzhou–Kunming Corridor (Longhai, Baoji–Chengdu, Chengdu–Kunming

Eight Horizontals

  1. Beijing–Tibet (Beijing–Baotou, Baotou–Lanzhou, Lanzhou–Qinghai, Qinghai–Tibet)
  2. Northern Coal Transport Corridor
  3. Southern Coal Transport Corridor
  4. Trans-Eurasia Corridor (Longhai, Lanzhou–Xinjiang, Northern Xinjiang)
  5. Nanjing–Xi'an Railway
  6. Yangtze River Corridor (Nanjing–Tongling, Tongling–Jiujiang, Wuhan–Jiujiang, Changjiangbu-Jingzhou, Yichang–Wanzhou, Dazhou–Wanzhou)
  7. Shanghai–Kunming Railway
  8. Southwest Coastal Access Corridor (Nanning–Kunming, Hunan–Guangxi, Litang–Zhanjiang)

High-speed lines

The Guiyang–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway under construction in Yangshuo, Guangxi in August 2013.

In the past decade, China has been building an extensive high-speed rail grid that is overlaid onto the existing railway network. This grid is composed of eight high-speed rail corridors, four verticals and four horizontals with a total length of 12,000 km. Most of the new lines follow the routes of existing trunk lines and are designated for passenger travel only. Several sections of the national grid, especially along the southeast coastal corridor, were built to link cities that had no previous rail connections. Those sections will carry a mix of passenger and freight. High-speed trains on passenger dedicated lines can generally reach 300–350 km/h (190–220 mph). On mixed-use HSR lines, passenger train service can attain peak speeds of 200–250 km/h (120–160 mph). This ambitious national grid project was planned to be built by 2020, but the government's stimulus has expedited time-tables considerably for many of the lines.

     Completed lines      Partially completed lines. Click [show] for details.

Four vertical HSR corridors

Four horizontal HSR corridors

Stations

Railway stations in China are classified into six classes: special, first, second, third, fourth and fifth. A special class station can handle at least 60,000 passengers and 20,000 pieces of baggage, load at least 750 freight carriages or assign at least 6,500 carriages per day. A first class station can handle at least 15,000 passengers and 1,500 pieces of baggage, load 350 carriages or assign 3,000 carriages per day. A second class station can handle at least 5,000 passengers and 500 pieces of baggage, load 200 carriages or assign 1,500 carriages per day. In 2008, there were 5,470 train stations, including 50 special class stations, 236 first-class stations, 362 second-class stations and 936 third-class stations.[3]

Bridges

The Beipan River Bridge on the Liupanshui–Baiguo Railway in Guizhou Province of southwest China, is the highest railway bridge in the world. The bridge deck is 275 metres (902 feet) above the Beipan River in a deep gorge.

The rail network across China's diverse topography makes extensive use of bridges and tunnels. In recent years, advances in bridge-building and tunneling techniques have enabled Chinese railroad builders to reduce overall track length and increase train speeds on rail lines through rugged terrain. The Yichang–Wanzhou Railway, built from 2003 to 2010 across the karst landscape between Wuhan and Chongqing, has 159 tunnels and 253 bridges, which account for 74% of the railway's total length.[43] High-speed rail lines are often built on elevated tracks to reduce the need to acquire land and involve very long bridges. The Beijing–Shanghai High-Speed Railway has three of longest railroad bridges in the world with lengths of 164.8 kilometres (102.4 miles), 113.7 kilometres (70.6 miles) and 48.15 kilometres (29.92 miles). The Beipan River Shuibai Railway Bridge built in 2003 in Guizhou Province is the world's highest railway bridge. Its bridge deck is 275 metres (902 feet) above the Beipan River in a deep gorge.

As of 2008, there were 47,524 railway bridges in use in Mainland China (excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan), including 872 major bridges over 500 metres (1,600 feet) in length.[3]

Tunnels

The Greater Khingan Ridge Tunnel on the Harbin-Manzhouli Railway, built in 1904.

As of 2008, there were 6,102 railway tunnels in use in Mainland China (excluding Hong Kong and Taiwan), including 183 over 3 kilometres (1.9 miles) and seven over 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) in length.[3] The first railroad tunnel was built in 1888 by the Qing Dynasty in Taiwan. The Shi-chiu-lin Tunnel near Keelung, 261 metres (856 feet) long, is now a historical landmark. The oldest rail tunnel on the mainland is the 3,077.2 metres (10,096 feet) Greater Khingan Rail Ridge built in 1904 on the Chinese Eastern Railway in modern-day Inner Mongolia. The longest tunnel in China is the 27,848 metres (91,365 feet) Taihangshan Tunnel on the Shijiazhuang–Taiyuan High-Speed Railway in northern China. Several longer tunnels are under construction.

Train ferries

Freight cars at the Port of Lüshun, the northern terminus for the Bohai Train Ferry.

The most notable train ferries in China are the Guangdong–Hainan Ferry, across the Qiongzhou Strait between the Leizhou Peninsula on the south coast of Guangdong and the island of Hainan, and the Bohai Train Ferry, connecting the Liaodong and Shandong Peninsulas across the Bohai Bay. These two ferries began operating, respectively, in 2003 and 2007.

A river ferry carries trains on the Xinyi–Changxing Railway across the Yangtze River at Jingjiang, halfway between Nanjing and Shanghai. In the first half of the 20th century, all trains traversing the Yangtze River required ferries. Since the completion of the Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge in 1953, at least fifteen railway bridges and two subway tunnels now span the Yangtze.

High-speed rail

A CRH5 high-speed train on the Beijing–Shanghai Railway.

High-speed rail in China refers to any train service (generally passenger only) with average train speeds above 200 km/h (120 mph). High-speed service on China Railway High-Speed (CRH) train sets was officially introduced in 2007. These trains run on upgraded conventional lines as well as passenger dedicated high-speed track that can permit speeds of up to 350 kilometres per hour (220 mph).

In the decade prior to the introduction of high-speed rail, the travel speed of conventional trains was raised on most of the mainlines. By 2007, the top speed for passenger trains reached 200 kilometres per hour (120 mph) on main lines such as the Jinghu Railway, Jingha Railway, and Jingguang Railway.[44] Heavy-haul freight transportation speed limit was also boosted to 120 km/h. This speedup was expected to boost passenger and cargo capacity by 18 percent and 12 percent respectively.[45] Some of the newly built high-speed passenger dedicated lines such as the Beijing–Tianjin Intercity Railway and Wuhan–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway had top speeds of 350 km/h (220 mph). Top train speeds were lowered to 300 km/h (190 mph) in 2011.

Prior to the adoption of conventional tracks for high-speed rail, planning authorities also experimented with maglev technology. The Shanghai Maglev Train built in 2004 remains the fastest train in the country with peak speeds of 431 km/h (268 mph). The train makes the 30.5 km (19.0 mi) trip from the Pudong Airport to the city in less than 7.5 minutes.

Passenger transport

The Beijing West Railway Station, opened in 1996, is one of the largest rail stations in Asia. The station handles an average of 150,000–180,000 passengers per day.

Rail is one of the principal means of passenger transport in China. In 2014, railways delivered 2.357 billion passenger trips and generated 1,160.48 billion passenger-km,[1] compared to 1.456 billion trips and 772.8 billion passenger-km in 2008.[46] The sharp increase in the number of train trips taken is driven by the rapid growth of high-speed rail service.

Average trip distance declined slightly from 530 km to 503 km, which shows that train travel is primarily used for long-distance trips. This contrasts greatly with countries such as Germany, where the average rail trip is only about 40 km long.[47] The difference may be explained by the near-absence of traditional commuter rail systems (low cost, frequent service, frequent stops) in China; the incipient Beijing Suburban Railway may perhaps be their only specimen in the country. However, a number of high-speed intercity railways have been opened since 2005, and many more are under construction; they may attract an increasing share of short-distance trips.

Classes of service

Passenger trains are identified by their class of service (usually indicated by letter prefix for faster trains) followed by three to four numerals indicating the bureau and region of operation.

Class Description
G High Speed Long distance high-speed service. Maximum speed 300 km/h (190 mph). G1–G5998 for cross-bureau service; G6001–G9998 for service within one railway bureau
gaosu 高速
C Intercity Intercity high-speed service. Maximum speed 300 km/h (190 mph). C1–C1998 for cross-bureau service; C2001–C9998 for service within one railway bureau
'chengji 城际
D Electrical Multiple Unit Long distance high-speed service. Maximum speed 200–250 km/h (120–160 mph). D1–D3998 for cross-bureau service; D4001–C9998 for service within one railway bureau
dongchezu 动车组
Z Direct Express Direct express service between two cities with few or no intervening stops; often overnight trains. Maximum speed 160 km/h (99 mph).
zhida tekuai 直达特快
T Express Long distance service stopping only at provincial capitals, subprovincial-level and major prefecture-level cities. Maximum speed 140 km/h (87 mph). T1–T4998 for cross-bureau service; T5001–T9998 for service within one railway bureau
tekuai 特快
K Fast Service stopping at prefectural and higher-level cities. Maximum speed 120 km/h (75 mph). K1–K6998 for cross-bureau service; K7001–K9998 for service within one railway bureau
kuaisu 快速
Regular Fast
pukuai 普快
Regular service stopping at all prefectural and higher-level cities and some county-level cities. Maximum speed 120 km/h (75 mph). 1001–1998 for service across three bureaus; 2001-3998 for service across two bureaus, and 4001-5998 for service within one railway bureau
Regular
puke 普客
Regular service stopping at all passenger stations along route. Maximum speed 100 km/h (62 mph). 6001-6198 for cross-bureau service. 6201-7598 for service within one railway bureau
L Temporary Additional holiday service, especially for Chinese New Year travelers. L1001–L6998 for service across bureaus; L7001-L5998 for service within one railway bureau
linshi 临时
Y Tourist Summertime service to tourist destinations. Y1-Y498 for service across bureaus; Y501-998 for service within one railway bureau
you 旅游

Types of cars

The newer high-speed train service (Classes G, C and D) that use electrical multiple units have the following types of cars:[48][49]

Second class coach (ZE) of CRH380A trainset
First class coach (ZY) of CRH5A trainset
Business class coach (SW) of CRH380CL trainset
Sleeping compartment (WR) of CRH2 trainset
Dining car (CA) of CRH1 trainset

Most high-speed trains have dining cars (CA). Some have sight-seeing cars (ZYG, ZEG, SWG) that are attached to the front or end of the train.

The following types of cars are found on traditional, non-high-speed trains:[50]

Soft seat (RZ)

Long-distance trains have dining cars (CA).

Holidays

Demand for tickets increases dramatically during the Chinese New Year and the two Golden Week holiday in early May and October, as many migrant workers and students return home and travelers go on vacation. The Golden Weeks are holidays organized May Day (May 1) and National Day (October 1). Chinese New Year also called the Spring Festival, follows the lunar calendar and is in January or February.

In 2009, the duration of the May holidays was shortened from one week to a long weekend, but holiday traffic remained strong, setting a one-day record of 6.54 million passengers carried over the Chinese rail network on May 1, 2009.[51]

The month-long period before, during and after the Chinese New Year is known as Chunyun or "spring transport" for the China's railways. During this period, train service increases to meet the demand from one of the largest annual human migrations in the world. Since railway transport is the cheapest method for long distance travellers in China, the railway is the most important transport method during the Chunyun period. For example, during the 40 days of the 2007 Chunyun period, it is estimated that 156 million passengers rode trains, which corresponds to 3.9 million passengers per day, compared to the overall average of 2.4 million per day. To make the situation even worse, traffic is highly imbalanced: before the Chinese New Year, passengers mainly travel from the large cities and after the holiday, the traffic reverses. Although hundreds of temporary trains are operated, train tickets are still in short supply. Trains are very crowded during this period, for example; a passenger car with 118 seats may accommodate more than 200 people.

Freight transport

Freight train carrying coal on the Harbin–Suifenhe Railway near the Yuquan Station in Harbin.

Freight trains in China are primarily used to ship bulk cargo. The important cargo is coal, which accounts for more than half of total rail freight tonnage. In 2013, 2.322 billion tons of coal were shipped on trains in China, about 58% of the total rail freight tonnage of 3.967 billion.[12] Another one-fifth of rail freight was devoted to ores and minerals, which were 851 million tons (21.5%) in 2013.[12] Other major categories of bulk goods include grain (110 million tons, 2.77% in 2013) and fertilizer (87 million tons, 2.19% in 2013).[12] Container cargo constitutes a small fraction of the total freight, about 88 million tons or 2.21% in 2013.[12]

Nearly all rail freight in China is used for domestic shipping. International rail cargo totaled 58 million tons in 2013, about 1.46% of overall freight tonnage.[12] The four largest rail ports of entry, Manzhouli, Suifenhe, Erenhot, Alashankou and accounted 56 million tons or 96.5% of the total.[12]

Cities in the Chinese interior have opened international rail freight routes to promote trade. In 2011, Chongqing began freight service to Duisburg, Germany, via Kazakhstan, Russia and Poland.[52] The route shortened shipping time from five weeks by sea to about two weeks, and costs 80% less than air cargo.[52]

Military transport

A military train near Guilin.

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) uses the railway system to transport personnel, supplies, conventional and strategic arms.[53][54] The military used to play a more prominent role in railway development and management. The PLA's Railway Construction Corps, which in the 1950-1970s built many of the railroads in the Southwest, became a civilian company in 1984 and is now China Railway Construction Corporation. For a time during the Cultural Revolution, the entire Railway Ministry was placed under the PLA's command.[55]

Rolling stock

A SS4 electric locomotive pulling coal cars on the Shijiazhuang-Dezhou Railway.

As of 2013, China's rail inventory included 21,100 locomotives, a net increase of 261 from the year before.[1] Electric locomotives were 55.0% of the total, with diesel locomotives accounting nearly all of the remainder.[1] In 2011 there were 19,431 locomotives owned by the national railway system.[15] Another 352 locomotives are owned by local railroads and 604 operated by joint-venture railways.

The inventory in recent times included some 100 steam locomotives, but the last such locomotive, built in 1999, is now in service as a tourist attraction while the others have been retired from commercial service.

A DF11G diesel locomotive pulling passenger trains on the Guangzhou–Maoming Railway in suburban Guangzhou in 2008.

Among the most common types of Chinese locomotives are the DF (Dongfeng or "East Wind") diesel series, the SS (Shaoshan) electric series, and the HX (Hexie or "Harmony") series. In the first decade of the 21st century, China began to import and produce AC/DC-AC transmission electric locomotives; the most numerous of these are the HXD series "Harmony" locomotives for freight loads. Most modern trains, for example for the China Railway High-Speed service, are either imported or produced in China using technology transfer agreements.

HXD1C electric locomotive pulling coal cars.

In 2013, there were 60,600 passenger cars, 85.9% of which were air conditioned.[1] The Harmony Express electrical multiple units totaled 1,411 sets and 13,696 cars.[1] Freight cars totaled 710,100.[1] In 2011, there were 52,130 passenger coaches and 622,284 freight cars.[15]

High speed rolling stock

International linkages

China is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC). The country's UIC code is 33. Chinese railways has adopted and begun to implement the GSM-R wireless rail communications standard.[56] China is also a signatory to the Trans-Asian Railway Network Agreement, an initiative of the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific to promote the integration of railway networks across Europe and Asia.

International passenger train services are available to destinations in:

Hong Kong

The Guangzhou-Kowloon Through Train is jointly operated by the Hong Kong MTR and China Rail Corporation.

Train services to Hong Kong terminate at the Hung Hom Station in Kowloon. Within Hong Kong the cross-boundary services use the tracks of the East Rail Line. There are three through-train routes, Beijing line (to/from Beijing), Shanghai line (to/from Shanghai) and Guangdong line (to/from Zhaoqing and Guangzhou East). Another express train service linking Hong Kong and Guangzhou with intermediary stop in Shenzhen has been approved and construction in the China section has commenced. This new express rail line will reduce the train travel time between Hong Kong and Guangzhou from 2 hours to 1 hour.

North Korea

Left: The Ji'an Yalu River Railway Bridge between Ji'an, Jilin Province and Manpo, Chagang Province of North Korea. Right: Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge near the mouth of the Yalu River between Dandong, Liaoning Province and Sinuiju, North Pyongan Province.

There are rail crossings along the border with North Korea at Dandong, Ji'an and Tumen.

Dandong, in Liaoning Province, is 274 km (170 mi) east of Shenyang at the mouth of the Yalu River across from Sinuiju in North Korea's North Pyongan Province. This is the most heavily used rail connection between the two countries. Ji'an, upstream on the Yalu in Jilin Province and 400 km (250 mi) by rail from Siping, connects to Manpo in Chagang Province. Tumen, also in Jilin and 527 km (327 mi) east of Changchun is located across the Tumen River from Namyang, North Hamgyong Province.

There are four weekly trains with hard and soft sleepers from Beijing to Pyongyang, as well as a weekly carriage attached to the Vostok train from Moscow via Harbin, Shenyang and Dandong.[57]

Russia

China's three rail crossings into Russia are all located along the eastern section of the border between the two countries.

A train leaving Russia and entering China at Manzhouli.

The crossings at Manzhouli and Suifenhe are at either ends of the Trans-Manchurian Railway, which was a shortcut for the Trans-Siberian Railway built through northeastern China in the early 1900s. Manzhouli, in the Hulunbuir region of northern Inner Mongolia, is China's busiest inland port. It borders Zabaykalsk in Zabaykalsky Krai of Russia's Transbaikal region and handles the bulk of the bilateral freight trade and one of the Beijing-Moscow passenger train routes. Suifenhe, in southern Heilongjiang Province, borders the town of Pogranichny in Primorsky Krai of the Russian Far East. The rail station on the Russian's side is called Grodekovo. Freight trains from Harbin to Khabarovsk and Vladisvostok pass through Suifenhe. As of November 2008, there was no through passenger service, but one could travel along this route with transfers in Suifenhe, Grodekovo and Ussuriysk.[58]

Rail cars in Manzhouli, the busiest inland port in China.

A third rail connection is located further south at Hunchun in eastern Jilin Province bordering Kraskino, near the southwest tip of Primorsky Krai. The station on the Russian side, called Makhalino, is located on the Ussuriysk-Khasan-North Korean border line, about 41 km (25 mi) from Khasan. This border crossing began operating in February 2000,[59] and saw only a minor amount of traffic (678 railcars of lumber) over the next two years. The line was closed in 2002–2003, reopened in 2003, but, as of the summer of 2004, it was still reported as seeing little traffic.[60] The line was closed between 2004[61] and 2013.[62] As of 2011-2012, plans existed for reopening it, primarily to be used for shipping coal and mineral ores from Russia to China;[61][63] The border crossing reopened, initially in a trial mode, in 2013.[62]

There are two weekly passenger trains in each direction between Beijing and Moscow.[57] The No. 19/20 trains travel 8,961 kilometres (5,568 mi) via Harbin, Manzhouli and the Trans-Siberian Railway.[57] The No. 3/4 trains, take a shorter route of 7,622 kilometres (4,736 mi), through Mongolia via the Trans-Mongolian Railway and has the two-berth deluxe soft sleeper cars.[57] Both journeys are among the longest train services in the world.

Mongolia

Changing bogies at Erenhot on the Sino-Mongolian border

The lone rail connection with Mongolia's railways is located at Erenhot, in Xilingol League of central Inner Mongolia, which borders Zamyn-Üüd in Mongolia's Dornogovi Province.

There are two trains every week departing from Beijing and Hohhot to Ulaanbaatar, along with five trains per week from Erenhot. As with rail service to Russia, trains from China need to change bogies in Erenhot, since Mongolia uses broad gauge.

Kazakhstan

There are two rail crossings on the China–Kazakhstan border, at Alashankou and Khorgas, both located in the northern part of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. They are the only international rail outlets in western China.

The westernmost point on the Northern Xinjiang Railway at the Kazakh border.

At Alashankou, in the Bortala Mongol Autonomous Prefecture, the Northern Xinjiang Railway passes through the Dzungarian Gate to the town of Dostyk, in Kazkahstan's Almaty Province and connects to Qazaqstan Temir Zholy (Kazakhstan's railway system). This crossing, opened in 1990, forms a New Eurasian Land Bridge, allowing trains from Lianyungang on the East China Sea to reach Rotterdam on the North Sea. There are two weekly passenger trains (one Kazakh and one Chinese) from Almaty to Ürümqi, the capital of Xinjiang. There are differing reports on which of the two is more comfortable, and the Chinese train is generally of a higher standard than the Kazakh train.

Khorgas, in the Ili Kazakh Autonomous Prefecture, is located southwest of Alashankou in the Ili Valley. The town on the Kazakh side of the border in Almaty Province, has the same name, Korgas. Here, the Jinghe–Yining–Khorgas Railway, a 286-km fork off the main Northern Xinjiang line built in 2009, meets the Zhetigen-Korgas Railway, a 239-km branch from the Turkestan-Siberian Railway completed by Kazakhstan in 2011.[64][65] The Khorgas crossing, opened in December 2012, provides a more direct route from Ürümqi to Almaty.[65][66]

Vietnam

Dual gauge tracks at Đồng Đăng in Vietnam accommodates both metre gauge trains from Hanoi and standard gauge trains from Nanning and other cities in China.

There are two rail connections between China and Vietnam, at the Friendship Pass and Hekou. At the Friendship Pass on the border between Pingxiang, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Đồng Đăng in Vietnam's Lạng Sơn Province, the Hunan–Guangxi Railway connects to the dual gauge Hanoi-Đồng Đăng Line. The crossing, opened in 1955, has displaced the older Hekou crossing as the primary rail link between the two countries. There are twice weekly trains from Beijing to Hanoi and both traverse the Friendship Pass. The trains consist of a typical T style Chinese express from Beijing to Đồng Đăng. The train may require passengers to detrain in Nanning for 5 hours (especially on the northbound service); a lounge area with reclining chairs is available for Soft Sleeper passengers.

At Hekou, the narrow-gauge Kunming–Hai Phong Railway from Kunming, in Yunnan Province crosses into Vietnam's Lao Cai Province. This line, also known as the Yunnan–Vietnam Railway, was built by France from 1904 to 1910 though rugged terrain. Cross-border service on this line ceased in late 2000, but freight trains has kept this crossing operational.

In recent years, China has been actively exploring and promoting the extension of its railway network to neighboring countries and distant regions including the Russian Far East, Southeast Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and even North America.

Macau

Macau SAR is the only province-level division of China that has no railway. An extension of the Guangzhou Railway to Cotai through Hengqin Island has been proposed.[67]

Russian Far East

In November 2008, the transport ministries of Russia and the China signed an agreement to build one more link between the railway systems of the two countries. One project involves the Amur River Bridge across the Heilongjiang (Amur) River, connecting Tongjiang in Heilongjiang Province with Nizhneleninskoye, a village in Russia's Jewish Autonomous Oblast. As of May 2014, it was announced that the construction would start "in a few months", and would be completed by 2016.[68]

Mongolia

In October 2014, the Mongolian parliament approved two standard gauge cross-border railways to China.[69][70] One line would run 240 kilometres (150 mi) from the Tavan Tolgoi coalfields of Ömnögovi Province to the border at Gashuun Suukhait and cross into China at Ganqimaodu in Urad Middle Banner, part of Inner Mongolia's Bayan Nur Municipality.[69][70] The other would run from central Mongolia to Bichigt in Sükhbaatar Province and cross into China at Zhuengadabuqi of East Ujimqin Banner, under Inner Mongolia's Xilingol League.[69][70]

Southeast Asia

Map of the proposed routes for the Kunming-Singapore Railway.

Proposals have been made to connect Kunming, the capital of Yunnan Province in southwest China with Singapore by three rail routes. The eastern route via Vietnam, central route via Laos and the western route via Myanmar would eventually converge in Bangkok, Thailand and from there a single line would be extended to Singapore via Malaysia.

The eastern route would replace the century-old narrow gauge Kunming–Hai Phong Railway with a standard gauge, higher capacity railway to Vietnam. The Kunming-Yuxi section was completed in 1993 and the Yuxi-Mengzi section opened in 2013. The Mengzi–Hekou Railway is under construction and expected to be completed by 2014.[71]

As for the central route, a railway from Kunming to Laos via Yuxi was slated to begin construction in 2010 but has been repeatedly delayed.[72][73] The expectations were renewed in October 2012.[74]

As for the western route, construction is underway on the Dali–Ruili Railway which would extend the Chinese railway network to the Yunnan-Myanmar border.[75] In November 2010, Wang Mengshu, a railway engineering consultant from the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said that construction on a 1920 km high-speed railway to Yangon was set to begin in two months. The railway maybe further linked to a deepwater port at Dawei.[73] But in March 2011, the Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming stated that the project was delayed due to the first elections in Myanmar in 20 years and differences in the railway gauge of the two countries.[76] He explained the Chinese rail developers were waiting for the new cabinet in Myanmar to form and expressed hope that work on the line would begin before the end of 2011.[76]

In addition to railways in Yunnan, an electrified line is being built from the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region to the Vietnamese border. In March 2010, a branch line off the Nanning-Kunming Railway was completed from Tiandong to Debao.[77] The line is being extended further southwest to Jingxi,[78] with plans to eventually extend it all the way to the Longbang border crossing on the Vietnamese border.[77]

Central Asia

Since 1997, the governments of China, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan have discussed the building of a 476 kilometres (296 mi) railway across the Tian Shan mountains from Kashgar in the western Tarim Basin of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region to the Ferghana Valley via southern Kyrgyzstan.[79] In March 2013, the China Road and Bridge Corp., an engineering firm, submitted a feasibility study to the Kyrgyz government, which found the project to be too expensive.[79] In December 2013, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev expressed his preference for an alternative line that would connect the northern and southern halves of the country.[80]

On May 5, 2014, the Export-Import Bank of China lent Uzbekistan $350 million for the construction of a railway through the Kamchik Pass that would connect the Fergana Valley with the rest of Uzbekistan.[81] On May 12, 2014, Presidents Xi Jinping of China and Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov of Turkmenistan signed a declaration to study the possibility of inviting Chinese companies to build a cross-border railway linking the two countries.[82] On May 22, 2014, the Foreign Minister of Kyrgyzstan reportedly suggested inviting China to join in another regional railway project linking Russia, Central Asian states and the Persian Gulf.[83]

In January 2014, the China Railway Construction Corporation completed a 30-km section of the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed railway between Eskişehir and İnönü in western Turkey.[84]

South Asia

Since 2007, Chinese and Pakistani authorities have explored the possibility of building the Khunjerab Railway, which would cross the Karakorum Mountains and connect Kashgar with Havelian in the Abbottabad District of northern Pakistan. In June 2013, the Pakistani government indicated that the proposed railway could be extended to the Port of Gwadar on the Arabian Sea.[85] As of February 2014, Chinese rail experts said the railway was unlikely to be built in the near term.[85]

In March 2011, Indian and Chinese rail authorities expressed interest in initiating a high-speed rail link that would link New Delhi with Kunming, China via Myanmar[86] The rail link would utilise the under construction railway from Manipur, India to Myanmar and the Dali-Ruili Railway under construction in western Yunnan Province.

Europe

In March 2010, Wang Mengshu said the country was in negotiations with 17 countries to build a continent-spanning high-speed rail network with destinations as far away as London and Germany, which could be completed within ten years. The 8,157 km (5,069 mi) journey (from Beijing to London) would take just two days to complete on trains traveling at speeds of up to 345 km/h (215 mph).[87][88][89][90] One line would run through Russia and connect into the European rail system. Wang indicated that prospecting and survey work had already been undertaken and that Central and Eastern European countries were ready to cooperate.

North America

In May 2014, Wang Menghsu told Chinese media about a proposal to build a high-speed railway from China through Russia and Canada to the United States.[91] The 13,000 kilometres (8,100 mi) line would run through a tunnel 200 kilometres (120 mi) long under the Bering Sea.[91] At 350 km/h, a trip from China to the United States would take two days.[91]

Africa

Chinese companies are building new or improved railways in a number of countries in Africa, such as Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Nigeria. These are being built as far as possible to "Chinese standards".

Longest train journeys

Some of the world's longest train journeys by distance travel through China. Beijing-Moscow trains via Harbin (No. 19-20, 8984 km, 144 hours) and Ulan Bator (No. 3-4, 7826 km, 131 hours) are respectively the second and third longest regularly scheduled passenger trains in the world. Only the Moscow-Vladivostok train (9259 km, 178 hours) is longer. Within China, the longest passenger train services are the T264-T265 Guangzhou-Lhasa (4980 km, 54 1/2 hours), T206/3-T204/5 Shanghai-Yining (4742 km, 55 2/3 hours), Z136/7-Z138/5 Guangzhou-Ürümqi (4684 km, 49 1/2 hours) and K1121 Harbin-Haikou (4458 km, 65 3/4 hours).[92] In addition, the longest train journey in China by time is K2288/2285 from Changchun to Kunming, with a duration of 68 hours.

The G/1276/7-G1278/5 Harbin-Wuhan train (2446 km, 14 1/2 hours), which began service on December 10, 2014, became the longest high-speed rail service in the world.[93] It overtook the G1202 Harbin-Shanghai (2421 km, 12 hours), which had set the previous record on December 28, 2012.[93]

The world's longest freight rail service runs from Yiwu, Zhejiang Province in eastern China to Madrid, Spain, a journey of 13,000 km (8,100 mi) over three weeks.[94]

See also

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