China Daily

Railways lauded for anti- poverty role

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily. com. cn

China’s railway operator — China Railway Corp — has helped lift people out of poverty, including opening new high- speed railways, operating slower train services and selling products from poverty stricken areas on bullet trains, according to China Railway Corp.

Since 2013, the company has invested 3.3 trillion yuan ($ 503 billion) for railway infrastruc­ture constructi­on in deeply poverty stricken areas, representi­ng about 78 percent of the company’s infrastruc­ture investment.

Also since that year, a network of 36,000 kilometers of railways connecting deeply poverty- stricken areas has been under constructi­on, of which 20,000 km are high- speed railways. When completed, the network will reach 274 poor counties. Among them, more than 100 of those counties have been newly connected with railway services.

A high- speed railway connecting Guiyang, capital of Guizhou province, and Nanning, capital of the

Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, is one such high- speed rail service. The line, which started constructi­on in December 2016, is expected to open at the end of 2023.

It will be the first high- speed railway with a designed speed of 350 kilometers per hour in the autonomous region. When the line opens, travel time between the capitals will be reduced to two and a half hours from the current time of more than five hours.

The line, passing mountainou­s areas, crosses deeply poor regions.

Zhou Junwei, director of the Guiyang- Nanning high- speed railway constructi­on project, was struck by the inconvenie­nce of the local transport network at the beginning of the project. When he and his colleagues conducted field research, it took them more than eight hours to walk 6 km to a constructi­on site, which was in a mountainou­s area.

“For local people, it is so important to have a better transport network,” he said, sharing his thoughts about poverty alleviatio­n at a State Council news conference on Wednesday.

“When the line opens, it will attract more people and logistics to these mountainou­s areas. It will also help local people get out more easily. More businesses will be attracted to settle here and also create more employment opportunit­ies, enabling local agricultur­al products to be sold across China,” he said.

Zhou also said that the new line will attract tourists who can enjoy the beautiful scenery along the railway.

According to Zhou, the company built 165.5 km of roads to transport materials for railway constructi­on and connect villages in the mountains. The project hired more than 7,000 local workers and has paid them more than 68 million yuan in salary.

Slower trains in poverty stricken areas have also fulfilled people’s needs and given them a better life by taking students to school and farmers to market, for example.

To boost sales of agricultur­al products from poor areas, the company has sold those products on 1,396 bullet trains.

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