Tuesday 5 July 2011
News from UIC Members

China: high speed rail line connecting Beijing and Shanghai in under five hours inaugurated on 1 July

Estimated reading time:

The 1320-kilometre Beijing-Shanghai high speed rail link was first proposed in 1994. The completion of the 23 billion-Euro line was marked by an inauguration ceremony on 1 July. The link is expected to carry 80 million passengers a year. 90 trains will operate daily in both directions, with the fastest journey time taking 4 hours 48 minutes. In order to increase safety, reduce ticket prices and extend rolling stock life, the trains must run slower than previously announced – no faster than 300 km/h – on the new link, even though they are designed for a maximum speed of 350 km/h. China’s high speed rail network, which spanned 8,358 kilometres at the end of 2010, is expected to exceed 13,000 kilometres by 2012 and to reach 16,000 kilometres by 2020.

mn
Share this article

The 1320-kilometre Beijing-Shanghai high speed rail link was first proposed in 1994. The completion of the 23 billion-Euro line was marked by an inauguration ceremony on 1 July. The link is expected to carry 80 million passengers a year. 90 trains will operate daily in both directions, with the fastest journey time taking 4 hours 48 minutes. In order to increase safety, reduce ticket prices and extend rolling stock life, the trains must run slower than previously announced – no faster than 300 km/h – on the new link, even though they are designed for a maximum speed of 350 km/h. China’s high speed rail network, which spanned 8,358 kilometres at the end of 2010, is expected to exceed 13,000 kilometres by 2012 and to reach 16,000 kilometres by 2020.

0 vote