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China starts construction on railway linking special economic zone
SHENZHEN—China began building
a railway linking China's two economic zones, the Xiamen Economic Zone
in Fujian Province and Shenzhen Economic Zone in Guangdong Province.
The railway starts from Xiamen, a port city facing Taiwan, and runs
502.4 kilometers southwest along the coast to Shenzhen, a booming city
bordering Hong Kong. Upon its completion in 2011, the railway will allow
trains to travel at a speed of 200 kilometers per hour, and a journey
between the two cities will take about three hours compared with current
11 hours.
The rail link is designed to transport 12 million tons of cargo a year
and accommodate 120 pairs of trains per day.
The 41.7-billion-yuan (5.6 billion U.S. dollars) project will be
co-funded by the Ministry of Railways, and the Fujian and Guangdong
provincial governments.
The new line will be another important section of China's coastal
railway artery. Currently, two railway lines, one links Wenzhou of
Zhejiang Province with Fuzhou, capital of Fujian, and the other links
Fuzhou and Xiamen, are under construction.
Xiamen and Shenzhen are among the first four special economic zones
designated by the state council in 1980.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |