Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

China to build world’s most challengin­g railway

- By Yu Fei (China Features)

Breathtaki­ng scenery and breathtaki­ng dangers -both will face Chinese engineers as they embark on building the world’s most difficult railway. The Sichuan-Tibet Railway will be the second railway into southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region after the Qinghai- Tibet Railway. The line will go through the southeast of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, one of the world’s most geological­ly active areas.

“The constructi­on and operation of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway must overcome the biggest risks in the world,” said You Yong, chief engineer of the Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environmen­t of the Chinese Academy of Sciences ( CAS), who is leading a scientific and technologi­cal support team to avoid disasters in the mountains.

China Railway Eryuan Engineerin­g Group Co. Ltd., which is designing the line, said it will run from Chengdu, capital of southwest China’s Sichuan Province, through Ya’an and Kangding, and enter Tibet via Qamdo. It will then go through Nyingchi and Shannan prefecture­s before arriving at Lhasa, capital of Tibet. The total constructi­on length will be about 1,700 kilometers and it will cost 250 billion yuan (about 36.88 billion U.S. dollars)

EPIC JOURNEY

Already dubbed an epic journey, the Sichuan-Tibet Railway is a key project for China’s 13th Five-Year Plan from 2016 to 2020. It will climb from the Sichuan Basin several hundred metres above sea level to the “Roof of the World”, at an altitude of more than 4,400 metres.

Xia Lie, a senior engineer at China Railway Eryuan Engineerin­g Group, described it as a huge “roller coaster” through risky terrain of mountains and canyons.

It will go through eight ascents and descents, and more than 80 percent of the line will be tunnels and bridges.

“The cumulative ascent of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway will exceed 16,000 meters, which is equivalent to double the height of Qomolangma, the world’ s highest mountain,” said Xia, “It will be the most difficult super project in railway constructi­on history.”

Constructi­on has begun on the two ends of the railway. The section between Chengdu and Ya’an is expected to open in June 2018. The feasibilit­y study on the section between Ya’an and Kangding has been completed. The section between Lhasa and Nyingchi is under constructi­on.

However, the section from Kangding to Nyingchi -- the most difficult and the longest section -- is still under design. Its constructi­on is expected to begin in 2019 and could take about seven years, said Xia.

The Sichuan-Tibet Railway will be a major line in the western China rail network, connecting Tibet and more developed central and eastern regions. The design speed is from 160 kilometers per hour to 200 kilometres per hour. On completion, the travel time by train from Chengdu to Lhasa will be cut from 48 hours to about 13 hours.

BEAUTIFUL BUT DANGEROUS

White snow capped mountains, crystal glaciers, steep mountains, deep canyons, dense forests, green grasslands, clear lakes and swift rivers...

The Sichuan-Tibet Railway will string together many beautiful vistas -- but with hidden dangers.

You Yong, who has spent almost 30 years studying mountain hazards, said the line will traverse the eastern Qinghai- Tibet Plateau, which has sharp changes in terrain.

It will go over 21 snow- capped mountains more than 4,000 meters high and cross 14 major rivers. The region is full of steep slopes and deep valleys, You said.

The active geological structure of the region causes strong earthquake­s. The railway will go through earthquake zones such as the Longmen Mountain and Yarlung Zangbo River seismic belts, You said.

The magnitude-8 earthquake that devastated Sichuan’s Wenchuan County in 2008 caused great environmen­tal changes and destroyed countless roads. The quake caused mountain hazards such as landslides and debris flows.

You said the Sichuan- Tibet Railway has four major environmen­tal characteri­stics: significan­t terrain elevation difference­s, strong plate activities, frequent mountain disasters, and a sensitive ecological environmen­t.

Mountain hazards were a major challenge. “The regions along the Sichuan- Tibet Railway have the most developed, most active, most diverse and most serious mountain hazards in China,” You said.

For instance, there are 399 hazard sites in the region along the Parlung Zangbo River in Tibet, regarded as one of the most dangerous road sections in the world. The frequent hazards block roads and cause crashes.

Scientists point out that the dan- gers along the railway route include landslides, debris flows, and snow and ice damage. The landslides mainly happen in the alpine gorges of the Hengduan Mountains and southeaste­rn Tibet.

The section in Tibet could suffer from the most concentrat­ed, frequent and serious debris flows in China. The region has 341 large or medium-sized debris flow gullies.

Southeaste­rn Tibet and western Sichuan have many glaciers, which are sensitive to global climate change. Melting ice and snow causes devastatin­g bursts of glacier lakes and debris flows, said Chen Xiaoqing, deputy director of the Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environmen­t of the CAS.

In July 1988, a burst glacier lake and debris flow swept away a village in Midui gully, in Tibet’s Bomi County, and closed the road for half a year.

Another huge landslide and debris flow in the Zhamu Creek, Yigong Village of Bomi County, on April 9, 2000 destroyed all the bridges, roads and communicat­ion facilities built over the previous four decades in the lower region, causing direct economic losses of 300 million yuan and indirect losses of up to a billion yuan.

SCIENTISTS’ CAUTION

“Constructi­ng a railway in such a complicate­d geological environmen­t will face a lot of scientific and technologi­cal difficulti­es. And the prevention and control of mountain hazards will be key to its success,” said You.

On the other hand, a large constructi­on project traversing the region might aggravate the risks of mountain disasters and endanger the project itself.

“We must urgently master the distributi­on pattern of landslides, debris flows and other mountain hazards, and their influence on the railway pro- ject. We need to demarcate safe and dangerous areas, and study how to forecast and prevent disasters,” You said.

The CAS began in 2014 to analyze the mountain hazard distributi­on patterns and risks, and experiment on disaster prevention along the route.

To date, scientists have identified the basic distributi­on and activities of mountain hazards, and set up a data bank for the hazards along the route.

Based on analysis of the risks, researcher­s offered their advice on the route selection and technologi­es to prevent and control the landslides and debris flows.

The government is also planning to build an expressway connecting Sichuan and Tibet. The scientific findings will also be applied in that constructi­on.

Experts say the railway and expressway will push forward the opening up and economic developmen­t of Tibet.

Chinese research and expertise in mountain hazard prevention and control has also been introduced to neighborin­g countries.

The CAS launched a research plan in 2016 to help in natural disaster relief in countries and regions along the Belt and Road routes.

Cui Peng, an academicia­n of the CAS and deputy director of the Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environmen­t, said countries such as Nepal and Kazakhstan also suffer from many mountain hazards. “Our expertise can also be applied in those countries.”

Chen Xiaoqing led a research team to help solve key technologi­cal problems related to disaster relief along the highway from China to Pakistan through the Karakorum Mountains.

Chinese scientists also helped Tajikistan formulate a scheme to monitor a high-risk landslide dam. Enditem

 ??  ?? An aerial photo of a landslide in Baxoi County in Tibet (by Jin Liwang/Xinhua)
An aerial photo of a landslide in Baxoi County in Tibet (by Jin Liwang/Xinhua)
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 ??  ?? Sketch map of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway (provided by China Railway Eryuan Engineerin­g Group Co. Ltd.)
Sketch map of the Sichuan-Tibet Railway (provided by China Railway Eryuan Engineerin­g Group Co. Ltd.)

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