China Daily

Transport projects to get more funding

Ministry pledges to push exploratio­n, applicatio­n of self-driving technology

- By WANG KEJU wangkeju@chinadaily.com.cn

China will inject more funds into transporta­tion infrastruc­ture and push forward the developmen­t of self-driving technology to build national strength in transporta­tion, said Minister of Transport Li Xiaopeng on Tuesday.

The country pumped over 3.24 trillion yuan ($456 billion) in investment­s into the transporta­tion sector last year, adding about 8,000 kilometers of railways and over 320,000 km of highways, as well as world-class projects such as Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport and the Beijing-Zhangjiako­u high-speed railway line, Li said.

As China has effectivel­y contained the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, the ministry will speed up the resumption of work on major infrastruc­ture projects to promote investment in the sector this year, he said at a news conference held by the State Council Informatio­n Office.

To date, 99.7 percent of transporta­tion projects are under constructi­on, he said, adding that the ministry will ramp up support to accelerate the resumption of key projects to meet the country’s annual investment goals on traffic networks.

China planned to spend at least 2.7 trillion yuan on transporta­tion infrastruc­ture projects this year, including 800 billion yuan on railways, 1.8 trillion yuan on roads and waterways and 90 billion yuan on civil aviation facilities, according to the ministry.

Li also noted that transporta­tion authoritie­s have been fasttracki­ng a number of new constructi­on projects in line with the country’s developmen­t strategies, and the country now has a reserve pool of transporta­tion projects with a total investment value of more than 800 billion yuan that can start as soon as the preliminar­y work is done.

Meanwhile, the ministry pledged to expedite the research and applicatio­n of self-driving technology, which will provide support for technologi­cal innovation for building a comprehens­ive modern transport system.

Liu Xiaoming, vice-minister of transport, said that self-driving technology has played an important role in the next round of technologi­cal innovation and industrial transforma­tion worldwide, and China has been promoting its developmen­t by “encouragin­g exploratio­n, tolerating failure, ensuring safety and combating monopoly”.

The country will kick off pilot programs for autonomous driving in Beijing and Shanghai, as well as Xiongan New Area in Hebei province, to promote intelligen­t transport with the support of technologi­es including 5G communicat­ion and the domestical­ly developed Beidou navigation satellite system.

Transport authoritie­s have also stepped up research on technical standards to adapt the constructi­on of new roads to the developmen­t of driverless vehicles, he said, adding the ministry issued technical specificat­ions last month for highway auxiliary facilities adapted to automated driving.

The ministry has worked closely with multiple department­s to guide the road tests of intelligen­t connected vehicles in an orderly manner and designated five research and developmen­t centers for self-driving technology, he added.

The country aims to build a comprehens­ive modern transporta­tion system by 2035 that is safe, convenient, efficient, green and economical, according to the document jointly released by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council in September.

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