China Daily Global Weekly

China-Laos line boosts tourism

Railway carries a growing number of cross-border tourists, improves living standards

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn

The high-profile ChinaLaos Railway is benefiting tourists from all over the world and also bringing more opportunit­ies for people in the tourism sector. The 1,035-kilometer electrifie­d line links Kunming, capital of Southweste­rn China’s Yunnan province, with Vientiane, the capital city of Laos. It began operations in December 2021, and launched a cross-border passenger service in April, with bullet trains running in both directions between Kunming and Vientiane.

The railway has cut the journey time between Kunming and Vientiane to 10 1/2 hours, including inspection­s at customs clearance stations at the respective borders.

By the end of August, the railway had recorded 20.79 million passenger trips, according to a newly released white paper by the State Council Informatio­n Office of China.

“It was fast, efficient and pleasant,” said Stuart Hart, a tourist from the United Kingdom who was visiting Laos, sharing his firsthand experience as a passenger on the railway. He has taken the service twice.

Hart, who lived in Shanghai for two years, said the service was as good as the trains he had experience­d in China.

Tourists Juliet and Dean O’Reilly, also from the UK, said the Vientiane Railway Station is big and beautiful. They took a ride from Vientiane to Luang Prabang, a popular tourism destinatio­n in Laos.

Before the railway opened, the only public transporta­tion between Vientiane and Luang Prabang was by bus.

“The bus took an entire day … It was not a pleasant experience to sit on a crowded bus from morning to dawn. The winding mountain road made the trip even worse,” said Vongthong Somphavath, a Luang Prabang native who currently works in Vientiane.

She added that the trip only takes about two hours by train now.

“Besides the speed, the scenery along the railway is much better than that from the bus,” she said. “There are some complaints about ticket prices, but the fact is that the tickets always sell out very quickly.”

Luang Prabang, the former capital of the Kingdom of Laos, is a popular tourist site, with beautiful natural views along the Mekong River and abundant cultural relics, such as the former royal residence and famous temples.

The railway brings more tourists to Luang Prabang, said Soudaphone Khomthavon­g, head of the media, culture and tourism bureau of Luang Prabang province, adding that it has already boosted transporta­tion, investment, logistics and tourism in Laos, and will continue to do so.

Data from the bureau show that since the railway opened, about 85 percent of tourists have opted to take the train from Vientiane to Luang Prabang.

“Laotian people and tourists from other countries find it easier to visit Luang Prabang by train,” Khomthavon­g said, adding that she hoped the cross-border railway link would bring more Chinese tourists back to Luang Prabang.

“Before the (COVID-19) pandemic, the number of Chinese tourists visiting

Luang Prabang ranked number one or two, but it has fallen to number nine,” she said in April.

She noted that the tourism industry in the province was preparing to receive more Chinese tourists after the train’s internatio­nal passenger service opened.

Chen Ruifen, a 66-year-old from East China’s Zhejiang province, took the cross-border passenger service from Kunming to Vientiane in April. It was her first trip overseas since the pandemic ended.

“The journey by rail is more comfortabl­e, and Laos is not far from China,” she said, adding that train tickets and hotel accommodat­ions are less costly in Laos compared with other internatio­nal destinatio­ns.

She joined a group tour and was happy with the journey.

The railway is extremely good news for local people in the tourism business. In Luang Prabang and Vientiane, paintings and photos of bullet trains and the railway hang in prominent places on the street, highlighti­ng the convenient and comfortabl­e journeys.

Bouncier Tangsinsom­yong, a 50-year-old tour guide in Vientiane, said that he and his peers were excited to see more Chinese tourists visiting Laos following the end of the pandemic and the reopening of the border.

As a landmark project under the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, the railway showcases the infrastruc­ture link that boosts the shared benefits of people from China, Laos and other countries.

It is the first transnatio­nal railway built under the BRI, funded mainly by Chinese investment, operated jointly by the two sides and connected directly to China’s national railway network.

This year marks the 10th anniversar­y of the BRI, and the third Belt and Road Forum for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n was held in Beijing from Oct 17 to 18.

“The China-Laos Railway has been completed and is providing a sound service, and its role as a golden transport channel is becoming increasing­ly prominent,” according to the white

paper of the State Council Informatio­n Office, which introduced and summarized the BRI’s work and influence in recent years.

Before the China-Laos Railway, Laos only had a 3.5-km railway along its border with Thailand, so the new railway has helped Laos realize a longheld dream of becoming a land-linked country rather than a landlocked one.

It has promoted transporta­tion, investment, logistics and tourism, and injected new impetus into the economic developmen­t of Laos and other places along the line.

According to a World Bank study — “From Landlocked to Land-Linked: Unlocking the Potential of Lao-China Rail Connectivi­ty” — the railway could raise the aggregate income in Laos by up to 21 percent over the long term.

Meanwhile, the transit trade along the line through Laos is estimated to reach 3.9 million metric tons per year by 2030, which would include shifting an estimated 1.5 million tons of trade from maritime transport onto the railway, it said.

 ?? ?? Local dancers perform in Vientiane, capital of Laos, on April 13 to welcome internatio­nal passengers who rode the China-Laos Railway.
Local dancers perform in Vientiane, capital of Laos, on April 13 to welcome internatio­nal passengers who rode the China-Laos Railway.
 ?? YANG YONGQUAN / XINHUA ?? Passengers who took the China-Laos high-speed train arrive at the Vientiane station.
YANG YONGQUAN / XINHUA Passengers who took the China-Laos high-speed train arrive at the Vientiane station.
 ?? ?? Travelers chat as they gather outside the station on April 13.
Travelers chat as they gather outside the station on April 13.
 ?? PHOTOS BY XING GUANGLI / XINHUA ?? A visitor is assisted by railway staff members at the station on April 15.
PHOTOS BY XING GUANGLI / XINHUA A visitor is assisted by railway staff members at the station on April 15.

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