Business Standard

Bullet trains are transformi­ng the world’s biggest migration

- BLOOMBERG

Millions of Chinese cram onto trains to make the annual pilgrimage home for the Lunar New Year holiday. It’s a crowded and often uncomforta­ble experience that is rapidly being transforme­d by the country’s push into the world of high-speed rail.

China already has the globe’s longest bullettrai­n network, but it’s plowing 3.5 trillion yuan ($556 billion) into expanding its railway system by 18 percent over the next two years, to 150,000 kilometres, or more than 93,000 miles.

Much of that will be spent on extending the high-speed network westward, which includes parts of the country that ancient Chinese poet Li Bai once lamented were so mountainou­s that getting there was as challengin­g as reaching the sky.

Almost 400 million people — that’s more than the US population — will travel by train over the Lunar New Year, also known as Spring Festival. China’s factories and offices shut down for the week-long holiday, which unleashes the largest migration of humans on the planet. Many of the country’s 1.4 billion citizens return to their hometowns for family gatherings, or, increasing­ly, are taking the chance to be tourists both at home and abroad.

While the advent of cut-price flights has dimmed the appeal of rail travel in other parts of the world, in China it’s on the rise. Last Spring Festival saw a record 10.96 million trips on one day, and for the first time more people took bullet trains than convention­al ones, according to official data.

Almost nonexisten­t in China a decade ago, high-speed rail has exploded, with more than half of the 25,000-kilometre network built between 2013 and 2017. The plan is to expand it by more than 50 percent by 2025, with eight main bullettrai­n lines running from east to west by 2030. China intends to have another eight main lines running from north to south as well.

 ??  ?? People line up at the Beijing Railway Station ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year
People line up at the Beijing Railway Station ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India