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In Special Consultative Status with ECOSOC
A five-year plan to develop China’s modern transportation was issued by the State Council on Feb 28.
The circular listed major tasks that include
improving transportation networks, enhancing smart transportation, promoting
green transportation, and developing new business modes in transportation.
By 2020, high-speed railways will reach 30,000
kilometers — compared with 19,000 in 2015 — covering over 80 percent of cities
with more than one million permanent residents. Railways, expressways and civil
airports are expected to cover cities with permanent populations of over
200,000. Expressway mileage is expected to reach 150,000 kilometers and the
number of civic airports 260.
The plan called for improvements in
transportation networks concerning high-speed railways, expressways, airports,
waterways and oil and gas pipelines. It includes building 10 horizontal and 10
vertical comprehensive transport corridors that interconnect east and west
China, and north and south China. Transport corridors in central, west and
northeast China were also highlighted.
Meanwhile, most villages should be connected to
asphalt or concrete roads, said the document. And the maintenance of existing
roads in rural areas should be strengthened and improved.
The Belt and Road Initiative is a keyword in
future transportation. More international transport corridors should be built,
connecting China with Europe, North Africa, South Asia, Southeast Asia and Far
East, according to the document. Construction of the modern Maritime Silk Road
should also be accelerated, with its center in East China’s Fujian province.
Transportation should be used to help
urbanization and balanced development among regions, including the coordinated
development among Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province, and in the economic
corridor along Yangtze River.
Transportation should also be connected with
poverty alleviation. More roads, railways, and shipping waterways should be
built in poor regions, such as ethnic group regions and remote areas.
More urban subway networks should be built,
covering cities with permanent residents of over 3 million.
Transport hubs should be improved in terms of
their passenger and freight services. Postal service, express delivery and
logistics should also be developed in efficiency and service quality.
Transportation enterprises are encouraged to go
abroad, participating in the construction of overseas transport infrastructure
and promoting the export of China-made transport equipment.
Cutting-edge technologies should be developed in
various fields, such as high-speed railways, electric locomotives, maglev
trains and passenger planes.
Smart transportation is emphasized in the
document. Information technologies should be integrated with transportation,
including cloud computing, big data, internet of things and mobile internet, in
order to upgrade its service and management and administrative supervision.
Transportation should be developed in a greener
way, said the document. Public transport should enjoy more support in cities.
Old high-energy consumption autos and ships should be phased out and
environment-friendly transportation should be encouraged, with more public
support facilities such as charging stations being built.
New transport businesses are encouraged,
according to the circular. Aviation industry should be promoted to connect with
tourism, culture, and internet industry. Transportation should also be
encouraged to cooperate with internet and logistics, to build an integral and
smart logistics industry.
Administrative reform on transportation should
be promoted. More red tape should be cut and simplified. Airspace management
should be reformed. More low-altitude space should be open, according to the
document.
Market access and price mechanism on civil
aviation and railways should be further eased for fair competition.
Public-Private-Partnerships should be also promoted in transportation, the
document added.
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