China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tibet to invest 33 billion yuan in upgrading transport systems

- By PALDEN NYIMA and DA QIONG in Lhasa Contact the writers at palden_nyima@ chinadaily.com.cn

More than 20 new highways will be built in the Tibet autonomous region next year, with a total investment of more than 33 billion yuan ($5 billion), according to a senior transporta­tion official.

Included in the plans are new routes from Lhasa to Nakqu; Dege to Qamdo; Qamdo to Jaka; Lhasa to Xigaze Airport; and Gongkar Airport to Tsethang as well as the Nyima-Aso section of National Highway 317.

GeYutao, head of the regional transporta­tion authority, said more than 54 billion yuan in State funds and loans were spent on Tibet’s transport infrastruc­ture this year.

“The total length of roads has reached 82,000 kilometers, and it’s expected to reach 89,000 km next year,” he said last week during the ninth regional Party congress. “Next year, we will finish constructi­ng 864 km of highways and 5,500 km of rural roads, and reconstruc­t 4,310kmof national and provincial trunk highways.”

The authority said the region aims to spend 15 billion yuan in State funding and 40 billion yuan in bank loans next year on improving Tibet’s transporta­tion network.

Wu Yingjie, the autonomous region’s Party chief, highlighte­d planned improvemen­ts to road, rail and aviation networks over the next five years when delivering a congress work report on Nov 15.

Tibet will speed up constructi­on of its second “Sky Road”, the Sichuan-Tibet Railway, during the 13th Five- Year Plan (2016-20) period, according to the work report.

Stretching 1,838 km, the railway will run from Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province, to Lhasa, capital of Tibet. It comes after the first “Sky Road”, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway, went into full service in 2006.

Constructi­on of the new line’s first section, from Chengdu to Ya’an, began in 2014, while the second section, from Lhasa to Nyingchi, began constructi­on in 2014.

“The section inside Tibet is expected to be finished by 2020,” Wu said, adding that preliminar­y work on the Yunnan-Tibet Railway and flights between Ngari and Purung, in the region’s Ngari prefecture, will get underway in the next five years.

Tibet has plans to build airports in densely populated and developed cities and prefecture­s, according to the work report.

“The progress of an elaborate transporta­tion system of highways, railways and air routes in the coming years will lay a foundation for Tibet to blend in with the Belt and Road Initiative,” Wu said, referring to China’s plan to improve global connectivi­ty.

The report said Tibet has witnessed rapid developmen­t in transporta­tion constructi­on in the past five years, with the total length of the highways increasing by 33 percent. In that time, the 300km Lhasa-Nyingchi Highway was completed, the Qinghai-Tibet Railway was expanded and the Lhasa-Xigaze Railway went fully operationa­l.

Xu Ance, an engineer with Qinghai-Tibet Railway Co, said the line has led to a boom in the region’s social economic developmen­t.

“Over the past 10 years, the number of tourists visiting Tibet has increased every year, while our passenger and cargo flow has grown annually, too,” Xu said, adding that the line has made transporti­ng basic goods, coal, cement and constructi­on materials far more convenient.

 ?? CAO NING / XINHUA ?? A worker drills a tunnel for the Lhasa-Nyingchi section of the SichuanTib­et Railway in March. The section is expected to be finished by 2020.
CAO NING / XINHUA A worker drills a tunnel for the Lhasa-Nyingchi section of the SichuanTib­et Railway in March. The section is expected to be finished by 2020.

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