China plans to raise the speed of its bullet
trains back up to 350 kph (217 mph), state media reported on Thursday,
six years after a deadly high-speed rail crash prompted authorities to
slow trains across the country.
A CRH (China Railway High-speed) Harmony
bullet inspection train leaves a train station for a railway inspection
assignment, in Guiyang, Guizhou province October 8, 2014.
REUTERS/Stringer/Files
SHANGHAI: China plans to raise the speed of
its bullet trains back up to 350 kph (217 mph), state media reported on
Thursday, six years after a deadly high-speed rail crash prompted
authorities to slow trains across the country.
Trains on China's high-speed rail
network are designed to travel up to 350 kph, but Beijing ordered speeds
to be cut to between 250-300 kph in 2011 after over 30 people were
killed in a train crash in eastern Zhejiang province.
The
Beijing News said the government planned to implement the increased
speeds between Beijing and Shanghai in September, which would cut travel
time to 4.5 hours from up to 6 hours currently.
China's
newest "Fuxing" bullet trains, which were unveiled in June and are
capable of top speeds of 400 kph, will be used for that journey, it
said.
China is home to the world's longest high-speed
rail network which competes heavily with domestic airlines. Of China's
31 provinces and regions, 29 are served by high-speed rail with only the
regions of Tibet and Ningxia in the northwest yet to be connected.
(Reporting by Brenda Goh; Editing by Michael Perry)
Source: Reuters
Comments
Post a Comment